ago
(Agoから転送)
イタリア語
編集語源
編集名詞
編集ago 男性 (複数形: aghi )
- 針。
関連語
編集- aghetto、aghino(指小辞)
- agone
- ago di pino
英語
編集語源
編集発音
編集後置詞
編集ago
- ~昔。今から~前に。
- 1913年, Eleanor H. Porter, "Pollyanna"[1]
- I regret to inform you that the Rev. John Whittier died two weeks ago, leaving one child, a girl eleven years old.
- ジョン・ホイッティア師が11歳の娘を残して2週間前に亡くなったことを残念ながらお伝えします。
- I regret to inform you that the Rev. John Whittier died two weeks ago, leaving one child, a girl eleven years old.
- 2020年, Alice Bryant, "Differences Between American, British Grammar"[2]
- In American English, the past participle of “get” is “gotten.” But Britain discontinued the use of “gotten” more than 300 years ago.
- アメリカ英語では「get」の過去分詞形は「gotten」である。しかし、イギリスでは300年以上前に「gotten」の使用は途絶えてしまった。
- In American English, the past participle of “get” is “gotten.” But Britain discontinued the use of “gotten” more than 300 years ago.
- 1913年, Eleanor H. Porter, "Pollyanna"[1]
用法
編集派生語
編集類義語
編集対義語
編集エスペラント
編集名詞
編集ago (複数 agoj, 単数対格 agon, 複数対格 agojn)
- 行動。
関連語
編集ラテン語
編集動詞
編集agō
参考文献・出典
編集- ↑ Eleanor H. Porter. "Pollyanna". 1913. (Project Gutenberg. Release Date: August 27, 2008. Last Updated: March 9, 2018. https://www.gutenberg.org/files/1450/1450-h/1450-h.htm)
- ↑ Alice Bryant. December 10, 2020. "Differences Between American, British Grammar" VOA Learning English. https://learningenglish.voanews.com/a/differences-between-american-british-grammar/5693438.html 2020年12月16日参照
- ↑ David J. Allerton, “Over the hills and far away” or “far away over the hills”, in Dennis Kurzon et Silvia Adler (eds.), Adpositions: Pragmatic, Semantic and Syntactic Perspectives, 2008, ISBN 9789027229861
In other words, temporal in is prepositional not postpositional, and it rejects both duration premodifiers and degree intensifiers. Similar to in are for and during. The postposition ago differs only in that it rejects environment (a) but accepts environment (b):
a. *ago three weeks
b. three weeks ago
c. * (three weeks) ago the concert
d. * (a little) ago
The postposition ago thus rejects eventive complements (such as the concert) but accepts a preceding durational complement (such as three weeks); it also rejects degree intensifiers (such as a little).