英語 の講師を検索する
Amr
using of an idiom
The calm before the storm; I understand what this idiom means that it is a quite period before something significant occurred.
The thing I am asking about is: Can it be used either the thing happened was of a good effect or a bad effect, or if a bad thing occurred only !?
2015年6月1日 11:37
回答 · 3
1
You don't use it before a good thing, in the metaphor the 'storm' represents something bad, violent or uncertain and 'the calm' something good, pleasant or tranquil.
You don't normally use it after the bad thing has already happened.
The common usage would be before something significant is to happen, where there is uncertainty and there is potential for things to go really badly wrong.
For example, soldiers waiting quietly before they go into battle. It isn't certain that things will go wrong and they will be killed, but there is a possibility. So the quiet moments before they go to fight could be described as the 'calm before the storm.'
2015年6月1日
It's a quiet period beforesomething bad haqppens.
Calm is good
Storm is bad
2015年6月1日
まだあなたの答えが見つかりませんか?
質問を書き留めて、ネイティブスピーカーに手伝ってもらいましょう!
Amr
語学スキル
アラビア語, アラビア語 (エジプト), 英語, フィンランド語, フランス語
言語学習
フィンランド語, フランス語
こんな記事もいかがでしょう

The Power of Storytelling in Business Communication
43 いいね · 9 コメント

Back-to-School English: 15 Must-Know Phrases for the Classroom
31 いいね · 6 コメント

Ten Tourist towns in Portugal that nobody remembers
59 いいね · 23 コメント
他の記事