English Language & Usage Asked by Kuzma Mikhaylov on December 10, 2020
The sentence that confuses me:
It has taken so long for historians to focus on the civil law of early modern England.
At first, I thought it means that historians have been focused on the civil law for a excessive long period. After checking the translation in my first language, I was surprised that it actually means that there is an excessive long period before the historians start to focus on the civil law. That’s quite counter-intuitive to me. Could anyone explain the mechanism behind this? Also, how will you say in English my wrong perception?
How it works: "has taken so long for..." describes an action that has taken a long time to begin. The action has been delayed for the period of time; the action itself is what comes after the for. Does that help?
Answered by FeliniusRex on December 10, 2020
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