Pesquise entre vários professores de Inglês...
[Usuário desativado]
as ancient as the nausea that had produced it??
I am reading a book in English and can't understand the meaning of the phrase.
It's a part of the line below...
Three of us had vomited, turning away from one another in a reflex as ancient as the nausea that had produced it.
Can someone explain for me ! : D Thanks!
29 de fev de 2016 10:43
Respostas · 6
1
This line seems to mean the revulsion that triggered the vomiting was a deeply rooted revulsion, like the panic that the site of blood might cause and certainly like the emotions one would feel upon unexpectedly finding a dead person. Because of the revulsion the three turned away. Likewise the same events (the one triggering this passage, the site of blood, or finding a dead person) could trigger the nausea that produced "it." "It," of course, is the vomiting.
To summarize: the event-triggering-the-passage caused two reflexes: (1) turning away and (2) nausea. The nausea produced vomiting.
What I don't understand is why the three turned away from one another and not just the site. Perhaps the event was of an embarrasing nature and each of the three did want to share their reaction face-to-face.
29 de fevereiro de 2016
1
it means that the reflex ( which means something you do without thinking) to turn away from each other while vomiting is old. they compare the reflex to the nausea ( nausea is a stomach sickness that can lead to vomiting) that made them vomit.
29 de fevereiro de 2016
1
Hello Marissa, she is saying that the reflex and the nausea are as old as each other - ie they are both part of the human way.
Hope this helps
Bob
29 de fevereiro de 2016
Ainda não encontrou suas respostas?
Escreva suas perguntas e deixe os falantes nativos ajudá-lo!
Artigos que Você Pode Gostar Também

English Vocabulary for Using Microsoft Office at Work
18 votados positivos · 3 Comentários

How to Answer “How Was Your Weekend?” Naturally in English
52 votados positivos · 29 Comentários

Why Some Jokes Don’t Translate: Understanding Humor in English
15 votados positivos · 6 Comentários
Mais artigos
