charles
"good, great, wonderful" what's the difference? When I want to express something is very good, which word should I use? What's the different among them. And when I want to express that I really like something or to do something, how will you, native speakers say? Show me some example and thank you.
20 nov. 2012 02:35
Antwoorden · 7
1
Good< Great < Wonderful. Good means it desirable or it's nice. Great means it's better than good, as in very good. Wonderful means extremely good, inspiring delight or wonder as well. Example: "this pie is good" implies it was just a nice pie. "this pie is great!" implies it was better than good, it was very good :) "this pie is wonderful" implies the pie was extremely good, delicious and it brought you pure delight. :D Example2: "I think English is a wonderful subject and I enjoy learning it" you're stating that English is amazing. "the stars are wonderful and bright" it's stating that the stars evoke wonder. If you need me to explain further don't hesitate to say so :) I'll try my best.
20 november 2012
1
Let's say you made a Chinese dish and you wanted me to try it. My reactions: 1. "This is good." I'll eat more than one bite. 2. "This is great." I'll finish the entire plate. 3. "This is wonderful!" I might ask for the recipe because I'll want to eat it again and share it with my friends.
20 november 2012
they all mean essentially the same thing - with varying degrees of emphasis, from least to most: good, great, wonderful good and great are used more commonly than wonderful in my opinion, wonderful is usually reserved for something that's especially nice.
20 november 2012
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