Kseniia
Any difference? It's a rather silly question. It's rather a silly question. Is there any difference between these two sentences? If yes, what is it?
2019年10月28日 15:22
回答 · 9
2
In "a rather silly question", the 'rather' is modifying 'silly'; in "rather a silly question", the 'rather' is modifying 'a silly question'. There isn't a discernable difference in meaning. However, there are cases where you would choose one construction over the other: With any determiner other than 'a/an', the 'rather' has to come before the adjective: for example, "You asked some rather silly questions" or "She wore that rather risqué dress". The 'rather' in first position option isn't possible here. However, it's more usual to say "You took rather a long time" than "You took a rather long time", but I don't really know why. The first feels more natural: perhaps because 'a long time' is seen as a fixed concept? I'm not sure, though.
2019年10月29日
1
To me, as an American, the word "rather" already feels both old-fashioned and British, but "rather a" feels MORE old-fashioned and MORE British than "a rather." As an American, I'd usually use words like slightly, somewhat, fairly, or kind of. Google Ngrams shows the begfore 1905 in America, and before 1930 in England, "rather a" was more common than "a rather". Now, i both countries, "a rather" is much more common than "rather a". But, as everyone else said, the difference is very small.
2019年10月28日
1
There is no significant difference.
2019年10月28日
Thank you Trang Thuỳ, thank you Tyler!
2019年10月28日
There is really no difference between these two sentences. The difference in tone is SO minimal, that it would be hard to put it into words.
2019年10月28日
さらに表示する
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!