chen
I’ll cook the potatoes if someone will ____ them first. A. skin B. peel Note: I thought the answer was “to skin, but I found the correct answer is “to peel.” Both verbs are very similar in meaning so I wonder if there are general rules that people go by, such as “vegetables are peeled, animals are skinned”?
2013年7月31日 05:34
回答 · 7
5
Thats a great question. I think it has more to do with what is used to being used. Because we call the outside of a potato the "skin". You can even order "Potato Skins" at some restaurants loaded with cheese and toppings. The act of peeling something is a verb. But its also common if you fall down to "skin your knee" so here "skin" is used to mean that your skin peeled off. So I think either are correct, but you would normally hear "peel a potato" becasue that is what has been used habitually.
2013年7月31日
2
both are fine, but peel sounds better. Skin sounds a little old-fashioned.
2013年7月31日
Oh I see, so shrimps are an exception. Thanks Steve!
2013年7月31日
Here its peel shrimp (and de-vein) SOme restaurants actually have a dish called "Peel and eat Shrimp"
2013年7月31日
Thank you Rosia I was waiting for someone to confirm it thanks. One more question, do we peel shrimps or skin shrimps?
2013年7月31日
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