Jang Joonggun
A(sth) refers to B From a dictionary: A refers to B if a statement, number, report etc refers to someone or something, it is about that person or thing : The figures refer to our sales in Europe. Question 95 refers to the following excerpt from a meeting. Let me make a few sentences. Please check if it is awkward in all aspect. 1. The movie refers to Vietnam war 2. The book refers to mathematics. 3. the report refers to the GDP of Korea
2017年6月2日 05:05
回答 · 1
1
That is an interesting question. Yes, it in the example 'refers' does mean 'about', BUT you can't use it like that in general, and I'm not sure I can properly explain the difference. If the book, or the movie are ABOUT that topic, you can't say they REFER to that topic. A reference is when you mention something that has relevance to the whole thing. So, if a movie was about (say) the hippie movement in the USA, you could say it referred to the war, in terms of how the war affected the behaviour of the hippies. If the book was about astronomy, you could say that it refers to mathematics, to explain the movement of the planets. The report could only refer to the GDP of Korea, if it was about something else, perhaps the economics of China?
2017年6月2日
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