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Is it OK to say, 1 the effects of burning fossil fuels have reached a high degree, 2 the problems of burning fossil fuels have reached a high degree? I mean the problems are serious.
2024年8月1日 11:20
解答 · 8
2
A high degree of what? You must say. Also, "effects" and "problems" are too vague to measure so they don't really fit with the word "degree", which is quasi-quantitative. For instance, you could say "The rate of fossil fuel consumption justifies a high degree of alarm." "The effects of fossil fuel consumption are evident to such a degree that they can no longer be ignored." (The degree of evidence is strong.)
2024年8月1日
2
Instead of degree use 'level'.
2024年8月1日
In isolation, they aren’t very clear or natural. The problems from burning fossil fuels are serious. (Talking about a general relation with problems now but also in the future.) The problems from having burned fossil fuels are serious. (Talking about now. In some versions of English, ‘burnt’ might be preferred over ‘burned’) Though not wrong, you don’t need the present perfect because you are explicitly using words whose meaning connects the present or ongoing effects to past behavior.
2024年8月1日
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