Maya
Does these vocabulary actual used in daily life? - rustle - I appreciate it if answers are only your opinion. 1. rustle up a meal 2. rustle of trees 3. rustle of whispers 4. rustle through papers
18 mars 2017 03:30
Réponses · 5
2
"Rustle" is the sound of leaves moving against each other. "A rustle of trees" is a literal phrase, as well as "a rustle of paper" (a sheet of paper in a book is called a leaf). You understand what that sounds like. People whispering can sound like leaves rustling in trees, so you can use "a rustle of whispers" figuratively. "To rustle up a meal" is figurative. It probably comes from hunting game birds for food, as someone would need to shake the trees and bushes (=leaves rustling) to scare the birds out of hiding. In the idiomatic sense, it means you don't know what to cook and you don't have a plan, but you'll go and see what you have, and try to make something out of that. If you're anything above intermediate level in English, you should know this word.
18 mars 2017
1
Yes - I would rustle up a meal. Leaves are rustling in the trees outside. My cat loves to rustle through the papers on my desk. No - I might hear a murmur of whispers, but not a rustle.
18 mars 2017
Vous n'avez pas encore trouvé vos réponses ?
Écrivez vos questions et profitez de l'aide des locuteurs natifs !