Difference between revisions of "Though"

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(Created page with "A word about "though" /ðo/ Especially at the end of a sentence, or in apposition, it means ''en revanche'', ''par contre'', or ''quand même'' : *I don't have his phone nu...")
 
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*I don't have his phone number; I do have his email address ''though''.
 
*I don't have his phone number; I do have his email address ''though''.
 
*I had hoped to finish the chapter, but someone started talking to me on the train.  I did find out a bit about the schedule for works on the Vienne-Lyon line, ''though''.
 
*I had hoped to finish the chapter, but someone started talking to me on the train.  I did find out a bit about the schedule for works on the Vienne-Lyon line, ''though''.
*By far, ''though'', the album’s best moments come when the music’s scale turns epic. [https://downbeat.com/reviews/detail/time-gone-out §]
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*"By far, ''though'', the album’s best moments come when the music’s scale turns epic." [https://downbeat.com/reviews/detail/time-gone-out §]
  
At the beginning of a clause (proposition), it means quoique or bien que, même si, etc.  Technically it is referred to as a "concessive conjunction".  https://www.cnrtl.fr/definition/concessive
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At the beginning of a clause (proposition), it means ''quoique'', ''bien que'', ''même si'', etc.  Technically it is referred to as a "concessive conjunction".  https://www.cnrtl.fr/definition/concessive
*I had a tiny room with no view, though I had been promised a luxurious suite overlooking the beach.
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*I had a tiny room with no view, ''though'' I had been promised a luxurious suite overlooking the beach.
*Though often associated with a classic hard-bop sound, New Jersey-based saxophonist Tom Tallitsch changes things up a bit on Ten. [https://downbeat.com/reviews/detail/ten §]
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*"''Though'' often associated with a classic hard-bop sound, New Jersey-based saxophonist Tom Tallitsch changes things up a bit on Ten." [https://downbeat.com/reviews/detail/ten §]
*Argentine-born guitarist Dominic Miller is probably better known as a Sting sideman than a solo artist, though he has more than a dozen albums to his name. [https://downbeat.com/reviews/detail/absinthe §]
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*"Argentine-born guitarist Dominic Miller is probably better known as a Sting sideman than a solo artist, ''though'' he has more than a dozen albums to his name." [https://downbeat.com/reviews/detail/absinthe §]
  
'''but''' is very similar to a concessive conjunction.
 
  
though /ðo/
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thought /θɔ:t/ (''pensa'' (v.), ''pensée'' (n.))
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:*though /ðo/
through /θru:/ (''à travers'')
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:*thought /θɔ:t/ (''pensa'' (v.), ''pensée'' (n.))
 +
:*through /θru:/ (''à travers'')

Revision as of 20:45, 5 October 2020

A word about "though" /ðo/

Especially at the end of a sentence, or in apposition, it means en revanche, par contre, or quand même :

  • I don't have his phone number; I do have his email address though.
  • I had hoped to finish the chapter, but someone started talking to me on the train. I did find out a bit about the schedule for works on the Vienne-Lyon line, though.
  • "By far, though, the album’s best moments come when the music’s scale turns epic." §

At the beginning of a clause (proposition), it means quoique, bien que, même si, etc. Technically it is referred to as a "concessive conjunction". https://www.cnrtl.fr/definition/concessive

  • I had a tiny room with no view, though I had been promised a luxurious suite overlooking the beach.
  • "Though often associated with a classic hard-bop sound, New Jersey-based saxophonist Tom Tallitsch changes things up a bit on Ten." §
  • "Argentine-born guitarist Dominic Miller is probably better known as a Sting sideman than a solo artist, though he has more than a dozen albums to his name." §


  • though /ðo/
  • thought /θɔ:t/ (pensa (v.), pensée (n.))
  • through /θru:/ (à travers)