Kathleen
I‘ve some doubts about the usage of " on account of ". Does it completely means "because of" or does it have a nuance?
2010年6月22日 09:31
回答 · 2
1
Roughly spoken, yes, it functions like 'because of.' Example: "No one's killing any folk here today, on account of we got a really tight schedule." (Mal, from my favorite series, Firefly) It just sounds a lot funnier that way than the boring: "... because (of the fact that) we got a very tight schedule." It can also mean 'for the sake of.' Like: "They didn't divorce on account of the children."
2010年6月22日
Well said, Mark. :) Here's the subtle difference: "because" implies a basic result or reaction: cause and effect. "Account" implies that the situation was considered carefully... umm as though you were doing accounts. So the feeling is more logical or formal. Which makes Mal's line even richer. ^^
2010年6月22日
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