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Cindy
What does it means? :) "Noble, even. That ought to count for something."
*Text*
I stared without breathing across the long room, into the dark eyes of the hunter, and he looked pleasantly back at me.
Surely it was a good way to die, in the place of someone else, someone I loved. "Noble, even. That ought to count for something."
2012年5月18日 16:30
回答 · 4
2
The sentence "Noble, even" refers back to the earlier sentence, "Surely it was a good way to die." It is a very short way of saying, "It was probably also a noble way to die."
Any sentence like this ("XYZ, even.") means that you can go back to an earlier sentence and replace a word or phrase (usually an adjective) with XYZ.
Our new boss makes a boring task seem bearable. Fun, even.
(= The new boss makes a boring task seem bearable, and you could even say that she also makes a boring task seem fun.)
"That ought to count for something" means "There is probably something good or valuable about that."
2012年5月18日
2
Goodness! What are you reading? it sounds very interesting and the sentiments are poetically put.
Noble means having very good motives for doing something , for example being willing to sacrifice yourself for someone that you care for, or working hard for others who cannot help themselves.
It would help to know a bit more about the character and what situation he/she is in.
Perhaps he/she feels she/he has not been very good in their life and what they are going to do will make amends in the eyes of other people or god.
I hope this answer is not too complicated. Please ask me if you don't understand any part of it.
2012年5月18日
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