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jays
Joined: 13 Oct 2005 Posts: 221
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Posted: Wed Apr 19, 2006 8:54 am Post subject: She discouraged him to go.(2) |
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Which of the two is the meaning of the sentence of "She discouraged him to go." ? Thank you.
----- the two --------
1 She discouraged him from going.
2 She discouraged him and so he went.
I appreciate the two answers about the above question. But, I easily find the pattern " discourage someone to do" in Yahoo. One example is as below. Is such pattern formal? And which of the above two is similar to the expression in the example?
---------- below ------
"Terrence asked us if he could match up on him (Torry Holt) the entire game one-on-one and we sort of discouraged him to think that way," Lions head coach Steve Mariucci said.
http://www.detroitlions.com/notebook.cfm?document_id=253782 |
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LucentShade
Joined: 30 Dec 2003 Posts: 542 Location: Nebraska, USA
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Posted: Wed Apr 19, 2006 12:22 pm Post subject: |
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Hmm, I still think that "discouraged from doing" is more correct; "We discouraged him to think that way" still means "We persuaded him not to think that way" / "We convinced him not to think that way" / "We discouraged him from thinking that way." With either preposition / verb from combination, the meaning is still the same:
"We discouraged him to think that way" = result: he did not think that way
"We discouraged him from thinking that way" = result: he did not think that way
In any case, the action that appears after "discouraged" is not done. |
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