B
Boki
Guest
I saw a design for audio circiut, I am amazing why design it so simple.
Too much difference from school...
Too much difference from school...
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Boki, you really should work on your English writing skills. WhileI saw a design for audio circiut, I am amazing why design it so simple.
Did you mean, "It looked different from anything I was taught."? ButToo much difference from school...
Boki wrote...
I saw a design for audio circiut, I am amazing why design it so simple.
Boki, you really should work on your English writing skills. While
just a little bit charming, your English is so fractured sometimes we
can't tell exactly what you meant to say. For example, did you mean,
"I saw an audio circuit schematic, and was amazed at how simple it
looked." Or did you mean, "... was amazed at how simple it was to
design," but then we'd wonder how you determined that.
Or perhaps you meant, "I was amazed at the simple solution to what I
had learned was complicated to design," although then we'd wonder what
you had in mind.
Too much difference from school...
Did you mean, "It looked different from anything I was taught."? But
why would that be amazing? Most industrially-produced designs look
quite different from what you find in a textbook or on a blackboard.
Your next stage of learning can be to study the production designs of
hundreds of skilled engineers, to see their approaches and to learn
new tricks. I have done that by analyzing instrument service-manual
schematics since I was a teenager. And when my oceanographic company
shipped its instruments, we always included full schematics. Sadly,
these days the manuals of new instruments routinely omit or hide the
schematics, but old manuals can be purchased on eBay, or are available
on the web in some cases.
--
Thanks,
- Win
Yes, that's a good sentence.Dear Winfield,
1. Yes, this one, "I was amazed at the simple solution to what I had
learned was complicated to design,"
You mean, "from anything I was taught." Or, "from anything I learned."2. I want to express "It looked different from anything I was learnt."
Boki wrote...
Dear Winfield,
1. Yes, this one, "I was amazed at the simple solution to what I had
learned was complicated to design,"
Yes, that's a good sentence.
2. I want to express "It looked different from anything I was learnt."
You mean, "from anything I was taught." Or, "from anything I learned."
(The latter is short for "anything I had learned," but you can leave
out the "had," which is silently understood.)
Why don't you try some more good English, and tell us what you had
learned in school, and what you just saw as a more simple alternate.
--
Thanks,
- Win
You mean, "I was amazed." What chip provider, and what wasWhen I saw the schematic on a worldwide chip provider <--- only
two resistors, so, I was amazing,
Oops, that sentence doesn't make sense. Try again.I feel what I had be challenge in school is no sense...
If I want to express "I was amazing at that time", doesn't it ?Boki wrote...
When I saw the schematic on a worldwide chip provider <--- only
two resistors, so, I was amazing,
: ) Sorry.You mean, "I was amazed." What chip provider,
Vddand what was attached to the resistors?
Um... the part of schematic perform a high resolution signal amplifier.What kind of input are you talking about, a low-Z balanced microphone
input? Details, please.
I feel what I had be challenge in school is no sense...
Oops, that sentence doesn't make sense. Try again.
Best regards,--
Thanks,
- Win
Well, if you were amazed at what you saw, you need the rightWinfield Hill wrote...
Boki wrote...
When I saw the schematic on a worldwide chip provider <---
only two resistors, so, I was amazing,
You mean, "I was amazed."
If I want to express "I was amazing at that time", doesn't it?
--Yes, boki, sometimes we're truly "amazed" by what you write
here. :>
.... in the traditional sense of 'being utterly confused.'
Boki wrote...
Winfield Hill wrote...
Boki wrote...
When I saw the schematic on a worldwide chip provider <---
only two resistors, so, I was amazing,
You mean, "I was amazed."
If I want to express "I was amazing at that time", doesn't it?
Well, if you were amazed at what you saw, you need the right
English tense to say that. But if you insist that you were
amazing at the time, that means others found you to be amazing
-- they were amazed by you, not by what you saw. Is that what
you meant to say to us?
Yes, boki, sometimes we're truly "amazed" by what you write
here. :>
--
Thanks,
- Win
---No, I was amazed that time.
I think I really need to study hard on the grammar lesson .., hi Professor
..
On Mon, 28 Mar 2005 07:44:03 +0800, "Boki" <bokiteam@ms21.hinet.net
wrote:
No, I was amazed that time.
I think I really need to study hard on the grammar lesson .., hi
Professor
..
---
You might want to say that you need to study the grammar lesson
diligently, since "study hard on"... has a completely different
meaning !^)
--
John Fields
derived = foremost, accepted format obtained from omitting unnecessary
preposition and juggling the words
Do not add "to". If you have to, it must be "to derive"....
Now, will you get back to your (poorly-written) question in the header?
Those two words must be hyphenated to make it blue (but phonetically, it's
OK).
Study my grammar lesson hard.... is the best syntax derived from these
words
Got it.
Those two words must be hyphenated to make it blue (but phonetically, it's
OK).
Study my grammar lesson hard.... is the best syntax derived from these
words
---derived = foremost, accepted format obtained from omitting unnecessary
preposition and juggling the words
Do not add "to". If you have to, it must be "to derive"....
Now, will you get back to your (poorly-written) question in the header?