She is. Study? Art? History. ?
She is studying art history.
Answer? Brief? Dip? Become? History? Serve? Where to? Confirm? This? View. ?
A casual look at history is enough to confirm this view.
What? Is it? Rest assured? Yes? His? Place? Are you online? History. ?
He believes that he will have a place in history.
That? From town? History? Stretch? Back? Where to? Before? 1500.?
The history of this city can be traced back to 1500 years ago.
What? Really? Written? Answer? Natural? History? Yes? Scotland. ?
He wrote a book on Scottish natural history.
Let me show you some other details of history, hoping to help you:
First, the phonetic symbols of words
Word pronunciation: English? 【‘h? stri]? ? ? Beautiful? 【‘h? stri]?
Second, the definition of words
Noun (short for noun)? History; History; Past records; past
Third, the usage of words.
History mainly refers to the sum total of events and people with great significance or far-reaching influence that did exist and happened in the past, that is, "history", or it can refer to a discipline that studies, analyzes and summarizes "history", that is, "history". Looking at past events as a whole, history is an uncountable noun; When history refers to a systematic account of past events, it is a countable noun, using the indefinite article A or plural form. There is no article before the explanation of "history", which means that the first letter of the school curriculum or examination subject can be capitalized.
History can also refer to "experience", "resume" and "origin", to past events or experiences, and by extension, to "facts that are no longer relevant or important"
When history means "how long has it been", have usually uses the present tense, and sometimes it can also use the present perfect tense.
Fourth, phrase collocation.
Real history? An official history written in biographies.
A complete history? The whole history, the whole history.
Cultural history? history of culture
An eventful autumn? Extraordinary experience, rich experience
General history? Comprehensive history
Human history? human history
Has a long history? A long history
Modern history? modern history
Natural history? natural history
Past history? past experience
Personal history? Personal experience
Secret history? secret history
Discrimination of the meaning of verb (abbreviation of verb)
Both the words history and story can mean "past events". The difference is:
A story refers to a series of events that may or may not happen at all;
History refers to the real events that happened in the past.
Bilingual examples of intransitive verbs
She? Really? Earned? She? Place? Are you online? That? History? Books. ?
She went down in history.
That is. Past? History? Now ?
That was before.
That? Teaching? Yes? History? Should? Isn't it? Is it? Limited? Where to? A date? And then what? Numbers. ?
Teaching history should not be limited to talking about years and people.
No? Ask? Me? ─? I am? Isn't it? Also? Is it hot? Open? British? History. ?
Don't ask me-I don't know much about English history.
I am? Take it? History? As? Answer? Subsidiary? Theme. ?
I minor in history.
She is. Study? Art? History. ?
She is studying art history.