Kai
What is the difference between "evolved to' and "evolved into" "I prescribe to the belief that human beings evolved to their present state." I wonder why this sentence use "evolved to their present state" instead of "evolved into their present state" Thanks in advance.
21 feb. 2019 15:13
Antwoorden · 3
I hope so. I can't give you a better advice. It's based on my instinct. However, in these cases, the context supports enough one or the other target: -- if the person says "---I prescribe the belief that humans evolved TO ..." the focus is on the Evolution Process (not to "the Present State") -- if I say "--- If salt water is put in the sun, salt transforms INTO crystals", the focus is clearly on the Final Product (not to the process). ciao
22 februari 2019
Oh I see, Thanks. A*P
22 februari 2019
I think it's a nuance that is centered on the prepositions rather than on the meaning of the verb: -- if I say "evolved (up) to this state" you should look at all *the progress* that took to that result -- if I say "evolved into this state" the emphasis is on *the result* instead than to the process that took to it I hope it helps
21 februari 2019
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
Kai
Taalvaardigheden
Chinees (Mandarijn), Chinees (Kantonees), Chinees (Hokkien), Engels, Indonesisch, Maleis, Russisch
Taal die wordt geleerd
Chinees (Kantonees), Engels, Indonesisch, Maleis, Russisch