the /ðə, ðɪ, ði/ 冠詞
/ðə/ 名詞以子音起音
/ðɪ/ 名詞以母音起音
/ði/ 重讀
那個, 該 (用於指已知的或維一存在的某一事物)
the
*
The definite article. A word placed before nouns to limit or individualize their meaning.
Note: ☞ The was originally a demonstrative pronoun, being a weakened form of that. When placed before adjectives and participles, it converts them into abstract nouns; as, the sublime and the beautiful. --Burke. The is used regularly before many proper names, as of rivers, oceans, ships, etc.; as, the Nile, the Atlantic, the Great Eastern, the West Indies, The Hague. The with an epithet or ordinal number often follows a proper name; as, Alexander the Great; Napoleon the Third. The may be employed to individualize a particular kind or species; as, the grasshopper shall be a burden. --Eccl. xii. 5.
The, adv. By that; by how much; by so much; on that account; -- used before comparatives; as, the longer we continue in sin, the more difficult it is to reform. “Yet not the more cease I.”
So much the rather thou, Celestial Light,
Shine inward, and the mind through all her powers
Irradiate. --Milton.
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