作者chenzhishun1 (chenzhishun1)
看板Eng-Class
标题Re: [考题]
时间Tue Mar 16 15:09:12 2010
※ 引述《bluecherry (紫蓝樱桃)》之铭言:
: 题目:
: 25. No questions were ______ Sara.
: (A) asked of (B) asking (C) asked (D) asked to
: 考题:桃园县97学年度国民小学暨附设幼稚园教师联合甄选笔试【英文】试题
: 提问:
: 此题答案为A。请问为何答案为A? 不能选D? 感谢喔!
: asked of 跟 asked to 哪里不同?
I have not seen this construct before, namely,
"ask (a question) to (someone)" [1]
People don't say:
"Let me ask a question to you."
They may say:
"Let me ask you a question." [2]
Or
"I've got a question for you." [3]
Or
"To me, this question is hard." [4]
None of the constructs in [2] ~ [4] is similar to that in [1].
The usage of "ask of" is not an uncommon construct;
it means "demand" or "expect."
See
http://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/ask_1
under item 5.)
hope it helps ...
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1F:→ chenzhishun1:"I asked her to dinner." is also correct... but 03/16 15:12
2F:→ chenzhishun1:it still differs from [1]... 03/16 15:13
3F:→ chenzhishun1:"let me say this to you one more time..." 03/16 15:16
4F:→ chenzhishun1:when the verb is "say" it seems to be ok... 03/16 15:17