Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - "The weather in Fuzhou is getting colder every day." Is the word "de" next to the white word or the local word?

"The weather in Fuzhou is getting colder every day." Is the word "de" next to the white word or the local word?

Correct use of "de, de, de"

The words "de", "de" and "de" are often used in oral English and writing. Because their oral pronunciation is "yes", people often use it indiscriminately.

To use "de, de, de" correctly, we must first master the part of speech and grammar, and understand the main components (subject and predicate) and additional components (attribute, adverbial, object and complement) of a sentence. Generally speaking, the word "de" is connected with a noun in a sentence, and the modifiers of the noun are in front of it, mainly nouns and complements. "My book", the attribute "I" is a pronoun; "Tall building" uses the joint phrase "tall" as the attributive. "De" means that the word or phrase in front of it is an adverbial and a modifier used in front of a verb. It is mainly filled with nouns, adjectives and quantifiers, and plays a role in limiting, modifying and explaining the head word (verb). For example, "the fruit trees are getting green"; "Gradually" is an adjective, modifying the verb "green" as an adverbial of "green"; "Scientifically summed up the experience of", and the noun "science" is an adverbial of the verb "summary"; "... seize all the time to work selflessly", and "selflessness" is the verb-object phrase of the adverbial of the verb "work". Adjectives or phrases (sometimes verbs) are used after the word "de" in sentences to supplement the degree and result of verbs or adjectives before the word "de" as its complement. For example, in As High as a Mountain, the phrase "Like a Mountain" is connected by "De" as the complement of the adjective "Gao"; In "make everyone angry", "de" is connected with the subject-predicate phrase "everyone is angry", which complements the result of the verb "provoke" and plays a supplementary role. In short, the correct use of "de, de and de" simply means remembering three things:

1, the modifier before the word is connected with the word "de" as the attribute of the noun;

2. The modifier before the verb is connected with the word "ground" as an adverbial of the verb;

3. The supplementary and explanatory components behind the verb or adjective are connected with the word "de" as the complement of the verb or adjective.

"Earth" is followed by a verb, such as singing loudly.

"De" is followed by a noun, such as my pen.

"De" is followed by adjectives, such as running fast.