LeTyan
Member
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2011
- Member Type
- Interested in Language
- Native Language
- Chinese
- Home Country
- China
- Current Location
- China
Here's a quote from a movie script (Batman: The Dark Night) which I found pretty confusing.
Bruce: "How will it hold up against dogs?"(The ‘it“ in the question refers to one of Batman's gadgets)
The technician: "It should do fine against cats."
In here, I actually expected an answer that explains how the gadget works rather than how it is(fine, good or bad) for the"how" question.
Because for example, "How are you gonna prepare the exam?", the answer would reasonably be "I am gonna study the book first and then do some exercise problems". And it should be very unusual that people answered "I am gonna prepare the exam very well."
So my question is, when faced with a "how" question, how do we know if we should explain how things work in the reply, or give a comment with words like"good","well", "Ok" or "bad"?
Bruce: "How will it hold up against dogs?"(The ‘it“ in the question refers to one of Batman's gadgets)
The technician: "It should do fine against cats."
In here, I actually expected an answer that explains how the gadget works rather than how it is(fine, good or bad) for the"how" question.
Because for example, "How are you gonna prepare the exam?", the answer would reasonably be "I am gonna study the book first and then do some exercise problems". And it should be very unusual that people answered "I am gonna prepare the exam very well."
So my question is, when faced with a "how" question, how do we know if we should explain how things work in the reply, or give a comment with words like"good","well", "Ok" or "bad"?