To read of Abigail Adams’ lengthy separation from her family, her difficult travels, and her constant battles with illness is to feel intensely how harsh life was even for the so-called aristocracy of Revolutionary times.
To read of
Reading about
Having read about
Once one reads of
To have read of
曼哈顿讲平行那章说,linking verbs are parallelism markers. To read is to feel
[infinitive phrase] is [infinitive phrase]
read of 了解到
read of 阅悉,听闻
平行,to read is to feel
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to read is to feel 了解到
read about 阅读关于XXX
感觉翻译起来第一个比较贴切?
“了解到X的故事,能够XX”
linking verbs are parallelism markers. To read is to feel
[infinitive phrase] is [infinitive phrase]
read of 了解到
平行,to read…… is to feel……
read of 阅悉,听闻
to read is to feel 阅读是一种感受
read of (someone or something)
To have knowledge of be familiar with someone or something as a result of reading about them or it (in something).
I read of his research in a science magazine.
Most people have read of her at some point or another.
平行 to read is to feel
linking verbs are parallelism markers. To read is to feel
[infinitive phrase] is [infinitive phrase]
read of 了解到
read of 了解到
To read is to feel
曼哈顿讲平行那章说,linking verbs are parallelism markers. To read is to feel
[infinitive phrase] is [infinitive phrase]
read of 了解到
平行 to read is to feel read of 了解到
to read is to feel!!!!
曼哈顿讲平行那章说,linking verbs are parallelism markers. To read is to feel
[infinitive phrase] is [infinitive phrase]
E begins with To, but have read creates a disjunction of tenses by placing the action of reading in the past while to feel is still in the present. The question is of middle difficulty
Choice A is correct because the sentence must begin with a verb form that completes the construction To… is to feel. Each of the other choices breaks the parallelism in some way,
B and C substitute about for of, the preferred preposition here.
E begins with To, but have read creates a disjunction of tenses by placing the action of reading in the past while to feel is still in the present. The question is of middle difficulty
read about (someone or something)
To glean information about someone or something by reading something.
I'm reading about Abraham Lincoln, at the moment.
I remember reading about a that in a magazine a few years ago.
read of (someone or something)
To have knowledge of be familiar with someone or something as a result of reading about them or it (in something).
I read of his research in a science magazine.
Most people have read of her at some point or another.
[infinitive phrase] is [infinitive phrase]
to read of
To read ... is to feel ...
read of 为固定搭配 read of 读到 了解到
曼哈顿讲平行那章说,linking verbs are parallelism markers. To read is to feel