Does '到现在' imply a recent change?
Chinese-to-English dictionaries seem to translate '到现在' as 'up to now' or 'until now'. In English this often implies a recent change in conditions rather than a continuation of conditions; however, in Chinese I don't seem to see this same implication.
Is this correct, that does '到现在' not imply a recent change? can it ever imply this by itself? If not, how would I convey the English logic (implied recent change) in Chinese?
translation grammar meaning
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Chinese-to-English dictionaries seem to translate '到现在' as 'up to now' or 'until now'. In English this often implies a recent change in conditions rather than a continuation of conditions; however, in Chinese I don't seem to see this same implication.
Is this correct, that does '到现在' not imply a recent change? can it ever imply this by itself? If not, how would I convey the English logic (implied recent change) in Chinese?
translation grammar meaning
how about giving some examples to facilitate the discussion?
– fleix
20 mins ago
add a comment |
Chinese-to-English dictionaries seem to translate '到现在' as 'up to now' or 'until now'. In English this often implies a recent change in conditions rather than a continuation of conditions; however, in Chinese I don't seem to see this same implication.
Is this correct, that does '到现在' not imply a recent change? can it ever imply this by itself? If not, how would I convey the English logic (implied recent change) in Chinese?
translation grammar meaning
Chinese-to-English dictionaries seem to translate '到现在' as 'up to now' or 'until now'. In English this often implies a recent change in conditions rather than a continuation of conditions; however, in Chinese I don't seem to see this same implication.
Is this correct, that does '到现在' not imply a recent change? can it ever imply this by itself? If not, how would I convey the English logic (implied recent change) in Chinese?
translation grammar meaning
translation grammar meaning
asked 6 hours ago
DuckMaestro
1547
1547
how about giving some examples to facilitate the discussion?
– fleix
20 mins ago
add a comment |
how about giving some examples to facilitate the discussion?
– fleix
20 mins ago
how about giving some examples to facilitate the discussion?
– fleix
20 mins ago
how about giving some examples to facilitate the discussion?
– fleix
20 mins ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
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No, it does not imply a recent change.
「到現在」does literally translate to until now, but their usage is different, as you've already noted (a continuation of conditions).
- In English, until now means practically the same thing as until recently.
- In Chinese,「到現在」means something like up to this very day in English.「到現在我還在...」means up to this very day, I'm still...
- To say the equivalent of English until now (that is, implying a change in condition), you should say something similar to「到目前爲止...」.「爲止」is an explicit statement that stops the otherwise implied continuation.
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active
oldest
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votes
No, it does not imply a recent change.
「到現在」does literally translate to until now, but their usage is different, as you've already noted (a continuation of conditions).
- In English, until now means practically the same thing as until recently.
- In Chinese,「到現在」means something like up to this very day in English.「到現在我還在...」means up to this very day, I'm still...
- To say the equivalent of English until now (that is, implying a change in condition), you should say something similar to「到目前爲止...」.「爲止」is an explicit statement that stops the otherwise implied continuation.
add a comment |
No, it does not imply a recent change.
「到現在」does literally translate to until now, but their usage is different, as you've already noted (a continuation of conditions).
- In English, until now means practically the same thing as until recently.
- In Chinese,「到現在」means something like up to this very day in English.「到現在我還在...」means up to this very day, I'm still...
- To say the equivalent of English until now (that is, implying a change in condition), you should say something similar to「到目前爲止...」.「爲止」is an explicit statement that stops the otherwise implied continuation.
add a comment |
No, it does not imply a recent change.
「到現在」does literally translate to until now, but their usage is different, as you've already noted (a continuation of conditions).
- In English, until now means practically the same thing as until recently.
- In Chinese,「到現在」means something like up to this very day in English.「到現在我還在...」means up to this very day, I'm still...
- To say the equivalent of English until now (that is, implying a change in condition), you should say something similar to「到目前爲止...」.「爲止」is an explicit statement that stops the otherwise implied continuation.
No, it does not imply a recent change.
「到現在」does literally translate to until now, but their usage is different, as you've already noted (a continuation of conditions).
- In English, until now means practically the same thing as until recently.
- In Chinese,「到現在」means something like up to this very day in English.「到現在我還在...」means up to this very day, I'm still...
- To say the equivalent of English until now (that is, implying a change in condition), you should say something similar to「到目前爲止...」.「爲止」is an explicit statement that stops the otherwise implied continuation.
answered 5 hours ago
droooze
6,9161719
6,9161719
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how about giving some examples to facilitate the discussion?
– fleix
20 mins ago