Anna_7
She's a beginner in French. She's a novice in French. Do these sentences sound more natural than "She's a beginner at French" and "She's a novice at French"?
2025年5月12日 09:49
回答 · 3
该内容违反了我们的《社区行为准则》。
15 小时前
How?
2025年5月12日 14:10
This is a really unhelpful answer, but I'm going to give it anyway! My initial reaction was that "in" does sound more natural than "at". However, the more I think about it, the more "at" seems more natural. Perhaps the problem is that I wouldn't say it like this; personally, I would say something like "she's just started learning French" or "she's still at a beginner level in French". "Beginner at" and "novice at" are normally used for skilled pursuits, like archery, ice skating, using spreadsheet software, or something like that. My feeling is that using "at" in your sentences implies that she is learning French in that spirit. "In" is perhaps a little bit more neutral.
2025年5月12日 13:35
还未找到你的答案吗?
把你的问题写下来,让母语人士来帮助你!