久久亚洲国产成人影院-久久亚洲国产的中文-久久亚洲国产高清-久久亚洲国产精品-亚洲图片偷拍自拍-亚洲图色视频

您現在的位置: Language Tips> Columnist> Zhang Xin  
 





 
That sinking feeling
[ 2007-08-14 14:54 ]


Reader question: "What does 'out of one's depth' mean?"

My comments:

Imagine yourself trying out the swimming pool for the first time.

At one end of the pool you have shallow waters, say, at 1.2 meters in depth. At the other end, which is the deep end, the water is, say, 3 meters deep. As a beginner you're not very good yet with water. You tend to struggle against it, fight it instead of flowing with it. But then again, when you can flow with it, that is to say, when you can get about without having to worry about remaining afloat, you can swim, for swimming is to roll with the flow and to do so with ease.

Relative ease, that is. You don't have to be an Ian Thorpe or a Michael Phelps to enjoy the swimming pool. Nor do you need to be a fish to enjoy the sea. Many swimmers plop their way about in lakes and seas, very awkward to watch, but that's ok. They are in their elements and not out of their depth.

We're drifting too far. We're not to be swimming out to the sea yet, before we know the depths, so to speak. Let's turn back to the beginning and recall our first timorous tiptoes out to the edge of the swimming pool. And imagine some mischievous friends suddenly grabbing you by the limbs and throwing you into the pool at the deep end.

Now, that's what being "out of one's depth" feels like. You're not very good at swimming yet and you're not sure if you can get out of the situation unscathed. In fact, you're afraid that you're going to drown...

That's it. That's how it feels to be out of one's depth. You feel like you've got yourself "thrown in at the deep end" and you get "that sinking feeling" (look both expressions up if you will).

Likewise one may feel out of their depth in other areas of life. Say, you're asked to make a speech to a group of computer scientists and you know little about computers. Or you are asked to talk about China's foreign trade with Russia and you know next to nothing about the subject. You feel you're in unfamiliar territory and you might be unable to cope competently.

You may ask why are people invited to talk about subject matters of which they know next to nothing about? I don't know. It happens all the time. You should address the question to the so-called "experts" that give speeches everywhere, on campus, TV and radio. They might know.

Anyways, here's an example of "out of one's depth" in use from an article on WH Auden (A Voice of His Own, February 3, 2007, The Guardian). Quoted here is a meeting between the author of this article (James Fenton) and the renowned poet.

Actually meeting Auden was an experience that left us quite out of our depth, and there were awkward silences in our small group discussion. I remember desperately trying to think of questions. I asked him what he thought of the latest generation of poets – Ted Hughes, for instance. Brushing the inquiry aside, Auden paused for a moment before saying with a smile that he always suspected questions of that kind of having some malicious purpose. As soon as he said this I recognized with a blush that I had indeed been egging him on to say something perhaps disobliging about Hughes or his contemporaries, although I had no motive for doing so other than hero-worship. I must have crudely felt that, if Auden was the great poet of his day, he himself should say so.

On this occasion (and no doubt on others, for the elderly Auden often repeated his bons mots) Auden, when asked for his opinion of Yeats, said: "Yeats spent the first part of his life as a minor poet, and the second part writing major poems about what it had been like to be a minor poet." On another occasion Auden said that he had only once encountered pure evil in a person, and that was when he met Yeats.

If this comes as a surprise, considering that the most famous tribute to Yeats on his death is Auden's elegy, you have to remember that for Auden there was always a case pro and con, as far as Yeats was concerned. At the time I first met him, he had recently written to Stephen Spender (in a letter quoted by Richard Davenport-Hines in his biography of Auden): "[Yeats] has become for me a symbol of my own devil of inauthenticity, of everything I must try to eliminate from my own poetry, false emotion, inflated rhetoric, empty sonorities."

 

 

About the author:
 

Zhang Xin is Trainer at chinadaily.com.cn. He has been with China Daily since 1988, when he graduated from Beijing Foreign Studies University. Write him at: zhangxin@chinadaily.com.cn, or raise a question for potential use in a future column.

 

 
 
相關文章 Related Stories
 
         
 
 
 
 
 
         

 

 

 
 

48小時內最熱門

     
  《一曲銷魂》:Killing me softly with his song
  “異性戀”說法多
  小心寬邊太陽鏡!
  Vehicles ordered off road for drill
  英國七成多司機不會看地圖

本頻道最新推薦

     
  That sinking feeling
  Tell的譯法
  Like father, like son
  Apple Pie
  Efficient police a sign of the times

論壇熱貼

     
  How to say "見人說人話,見鬼說鬼話“ in en?
  形容人有“親和力”都有哪些形容詞?
  “低生育,素質好,男女都是寶”,怎么譯為好?請教高手!
  請問“老鄉”這個詞怎么翻譯?
  C-E: how to say "路盲"?
  各位,“相親”英語怎么說?






主站蜘蛛池模板: 韩国美女豪爽一级毛片 | 久久综合久久美利坚合众国 | 特级aa一级欧美毛片 | 高清一区二区在线观看 | 国产午夜精品久久理论片小说 | 国产孕妇做受视频在线观看 | 99ri在线精品视频在线播放 | 精品国产视频在线观看 | 国产a级特黄的片子视频免费 | 精品视频一区二区三区 | 国产精品久久久久久免费 | 涩涩国产精品福利在线观看 | 美女很黄很黄 | 久久久全国免费视频 | 亚洲欧美另类自拍第一页 | 日本人一级毛片视频 | 日日碰碰| 国产精品久久久久毛片 | 亚洲一区在线视频 | 成年人在线网站 | 欧美成人毛片免费网站 | 中国一级特黄真人毛片 | 亚洲欧美视频一区 | 精品久久久久久综合网 | 日韩一品在线播放视频一品免费 | 欧美一级特毛片 | 国产成人福利视频在线观看 | 在线观看国产日本 | 污美女网站www在线观看 | 免费一级欧美大片视频在线 | 九九九热在线精品免费全部 | 俄罗斯美女在线观看一区 | 91欧洲在线视精品在亚洲 | 一级片免| 欧美一二三区在线 | 日本一级特黄高清ab片 | 另类视频区第一页 | 国产精品爱久久久久久久三级 | 毛片1级 | 在线欧美精品二区三区 | 国产片18在线观看 |