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Karen
better late than never or late better than never
I heard a saying:better late than never.Actually,I know its chinese meaning,,but is it very strange in grammar?I thought it should be said:la
12 дек. 2010 г., 6:51
Ответы · 4
2
I think she is asking specifically about the grammar, and why it is "better late than never" rather than "late better than never"
In this sentence, the subject is omitted. It's not just a comparison saying that late is better than never, it's saying that the state of being late is better than never. For instance, we could lengthen the phrase and say, "it's better to get it done late than to never get it done at all"
Do you understand now?
12 декабря 2010 г.
1
The correct term is "Better late than never". This idiom suggests that doing something late is better than not doing it at all.
Example:
Mother: So you finally cleaned up your bedroom.
Teenager: Better late than never
12 декабря 2010 г.
better late than never, but better never late.
12 декабря 2010 г.
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Karen
Языковые навыки
китайский (путунхуа), английский, японский, корейский
Изучаемый язык
английский, корейский
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