2022-04-14
ศัพท์ น่าสับสน - Set – F - From . . . to
แนะนำการใช้ ตามที่ส่วนใหญ่ใช้ แต่ละท้องถิ่น
ความหมาย อาจผันแปร ตาม ตำแหน่ง/หน้าที่ ในประโยค
Common Errors in English Usage Dictionary:
From . . . to
“From soup to nuts” makes sense
because soup was the traditional first course in a formal meal,
nuts the last.
Similarly “from A to Z” makes sense
because these are the first and last letters of the alphabet.
But this construction which
identifies theextremes of a spectrum
or range is often improperly used
when no such extremes are being identified,
as in “She tried everything from penicillin to sulfa drugs.”
These are not extremes,
just examples of different sorts of drugs.
Even worse is
“he gave his daughter everything from a bicycle
to lawn darts to a teddy bear.”
A range can’t have more than two extremes.
“He gave his daughter everything from paper dolls to a Cadillac”
conveys the notion of a spectrum
from very cheap to very expensive, and is fine.
Often when people are tempted to use “from . . . to”
they would be better off using a different expression,
as, for example, in this sentence:
“She tried all sorts of medicines, including penicillin and sulfa drugs.”