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Jessy
I don't know if “up here” is a set phrase. what does that mean?
here is an example sentence :it’s quite a trudge up here.
Thank you!
2014년 11월 10일 오전 5:00
답변 · 4
1
"Up" refers to a position that is above a given reference point (e.g., the ground floor). "Here" refers to the place where the speaker is located. So, together, "up here" indicates that the speaker is saying that he is at a position that is above somewhere else (generally, the ground floor, the sea level, etc.).
"It is a trudge up here" is something you would say when you mean "It is quite a laborious walk to get from where I started to this high position where I am now."
Although not a word-for-word translation, it is something like "爬到这里这么高的地方好累哦“ in Chinese.
2014년 11월 10일
The writer means "this high altitude" or "to this location, up high."
2014년 11월 10일
아직도 답을 찾지 못하셨나요?
질문을 남겨보세요. 원어민이 도움을 줄 수 있을 거예요!
Jessy
언어 구사 능력
중국어(북경어), 중국어(기타), 영어, 일본어
학습 언어
영어, 일본어
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