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Maya
Does these vocabulary actual used in daily life? - rustle -
I appreciate it if answers are only your opinion.
1. rustle up a meal
2. rustle of trees
3. rustle of whispers
4. rustle through papers
2017年3月18日 03:30
回答 · 5
2
"Rustle" is the sound of leaves moving against each other. "A rustle of trees" is a literal phrase, as well as "a rustle of paper" (a sheet of paper in a book is called a leaf). You understand what that sounds like.
People whispering can sound like leaves rustling in trees, so you can use "a rustle of whispers" figuratively.
"To rustle up a meal" is figurative. It probably comes from hunting game birds for food, as someone would need to shake the trees and bushes (=leaves rustling) to scare the birds out of hiding. In the idiomatic sense, it means you don't know what to cook and you don't have a plan, but you'll go and see what you have, and try to make something out of that.
If you're anything above intermediate level in English, you should know this word.
2017年3月18日
1
Yes -
I would rustle up a meal.
Leaves are rustling in the trees outside.
My cat loves to rustle through the papers on my desk.
No -
I might hear a murmur of whispers, but not a rustle.
2017年3月18日
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