Cambridge David
职业教师
Hello wonderful English students. Join me each day for an interesting question about the English language, British culture, or just life in general. Please feel free to add your comments below, or to contact me directly on italki. If you have a topic you'd like me to write about, just let me know. In the meantime, good luck with today's question 😊
In the sentence 'this restaurant is second to none', what does 'second to none' mean?
This is the best restaurant
This is the second best restaurant
The restaurant is full
I don't know any other restaurants
147 人已做了小测试
2023年11月9日 07:48
回答 · 4
2
I added this question because comparatives and superlatives are often a tricky area for students. Many try to say it was 'more bigger' or 'the most best'. This set phrase offers a nice way to avoid having to remember the grammar rules. Hopefully one day my student will use the sentence 'Cambridge David's lessons are second to none!' 😊
2023年11月9日
1
Hello Song. many thanks for your comment. The phrase 'second to none' is an idiomatic expression that cannot be changed at all. Basically it means that there is no restaurant better than it. Unfortunately, we cannot alter the idiom to say 'first to none' or 'third to none'. These would sound unnatural to a native speaker. Think of idioms as fixed phrases to be used in specific situations. For example, if the IELTS examiner asks you to talk about your favourite building / movie / park / city etc.., you can reply 'I believe that this (+ noun) is second to none'.
2023年11月9日
1
It’s certainly a tricky idiom. Very funny!!
2023年11月9日
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!