четверг, 5 декабря 2013 г.


Quite/rather
QUITE                                                                                                 
Means less than 'very' but more than 'a little' :          
 -  The film was quite good but the book was much better.
-  She is quite attractive, but not what I'd call gorgeous.
-  She lives quite near me, so we can see each other quite often.
-  I quite like reading but it is not my favourite pastime.
 Quite a :  goes before  a  /  an
- He is quite a good soccer player ( not  a quite  good soccer player)
RATHER -is similar to quite. We use rather mainly with negative words and negative ideas :
-   He is limping rather badly
- 'What was the examination like ? ''Rather difficult , I am afraid.'
  I was quite pleased with the hotel but she was rather disappointed.
When we use rather with positive words it means 'unusually' or 'surprisingly' :
-  These pears are rather nice ( nicer than expected ) where did you buy them ?   

QUITE also means 'completely' and NOT QUITE not completely :         
-  He  has quite recovered from his illness  
 -  They have not quite finished their lunch yet
Especially with a number of adjectives :
 sure, certain, right, wrong, true, safe, clear, different, incredible,  extraordinary,  amazing,  impossible,  unnecessary, obvious
-  I am sorry .It is quite impossible, I can't come !
-  Are you sure ? Yes, quite sure


http://www.tolearnenglish.com/exercises/exercise-english-2/exercise-english-42128.php


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