พบครู ภาษาอังกฤษ คน
LuoXiaoye
What does"shy" mean in this sentence"i think you were a few credits shy"?
I noticed his sentence in a movie,and i 'm a bit lost about what "shy" mean here in this sentence? does it mean that you fall short of it because of the lack of the few credits?
and is it a adverb here? what can it be replaced by? is this usage common?
31 มี.ค. 2013 เวลา 5:16
คำตอบ · 7
1
"Shy" in that context means "close to, but not there" and is actually an adjective.
Example; "The girl is shy." (adjective 1 meaning stating timid, scared, isolated, ect.)
Context of question; "I think you were shy a few credits" can be rewritten as "I think you were short a few credits/I think you don't have enough credits".
In this form, "shy" means that you have an amount of something, but just not enough to attain a goal, but close.
For example, if I want to buy the new Zelda-Skyward Sword game and it costs $60 and I only have $55 or $58, I could say "I am just shy of $60" meaning I have a close amount, but not what I need.
I hope this helps.
31 มีนาคม 2013
1
Your interpretation is correct. The dictionary analyzes it as an adjective: "Eleven is one shy of a dozen." You could replace it with "short". You could also say, "I think you were lacking a few credits." Yes, the usage is common.
31 มีนาคม 2013
He was one brick shy of a load.
He was three bricks shy of a load.
= he is not very smart, or could be used for someone a little crazy.
31 มีนาคม 2013
ยังไม่พบคำตอบของคุณใช่ไหม
เขียนคำถามของคุณเพื่อให้เจ้าของภาษาช่วยคุณ!
LuoXiaoye
ทักษะด้านภาษา
ภาษาจีน (กลาง), ภาษาอังกฤษ
ภาษาที่เรียน
ภาษาอังกฤษ
บทความที่คุณอาจชอบ

The Power of Storytelling in Business Communication
44 ถูกใจ · 9 ความคิดเห็น

Back-to-School English: 15 Must-Know Phrases for the Classroom
32 ถูกใจ · 6 ความคิดเห็น

Ten Tourist towns in Portugal that nobody remembers
59 ถูกใจ · 23 ความคิดเห็น
บทความเพิ่มเติม