搜尋自 英語 {1} 教師……
Alina Torovets
I have 2 questions.
1) Does this dialogue look natural? Any mistakes?
2) Do Brits say "What are you studying?" instead of "What's your major?" (As far as I know it's an American equivalent) talking about studying at university.
The dialogue:
A: What do you do?
B:I'm a five-year student at a medical university.
A: Amazing! What are you studying?
B: I'm studying nursing.
Thank you so much in advance 🥺🙏🏻
2022年4月12日 11:26
解答 · 5
1
Alina,
You are right, we ask "What are you studying?".
"I'm a five-year student at a medical university" sounds a little unnatural to me. We would probably leave out the words "five-year", ("I'm a student at a medical university") or even just say "I'm a student"/ "I'm a medical student"/"I'm at university".
Victoria
2022年4月12日
1
In the U.S. we don't say "medical university". Instead, we say "medical school" or "med school". For us, a university is a gigantic institution that contains all sorts of "schools", one of which might be a med school.
2022年4月12日
1
Do you mean ‘fifth-year student’ i e a student in year 5 of the course ?
‘ What are you studying ?’ is fine.
2022年4月12日
還沒找到你要的答案嗎?
寫下你的問題,讓母語者來幫助你!
Alina Torovets
語言能力
中文, 英語, 俄語, 烏克蘭語
學習語言
英語
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