2017년 6월 9일 금요일

Dic/ it turns out that ...


출처 1: http://www.phrasemix.com/phrases/it-turns-out-that-clause

You use "it turns out that ___" when you got some information wrong, and you're now giving the correct information. You first have to say what you thought was true. (Or the listener might already know this from other conversations you've had.) Then you say something like:

  • It turns out that it's on Wednesday, not tomorrow.
  • So it turns out that I had been waiting on the wrong side of the train station.
You can use this phrase in the past tense too:
  • I thought it was at ten. It turned out that it was at eleven.
...
  • "It turns out that my roommate had left his window unlocked anyway."
  • "It was supposed to be an investment, but it turns out it actually depreciated in value."
  • "He thought he'd just sprained it, but it turned out it was fractured."

출처 2: “As it turned out, ____” vs “it turned out that ____”


출처 3: turn out

─ HAPPEN. to happen in a particular way or to have a particular result, esp. an unexpected one.
  • As events turned out, we were right to have decided to leave early.
  • How did the recipe turned out?
─ HAPPEN. to be known or discovered finally and surprisingly.
  • The truth turned out to be stranger than we had expected.
  • It turns out that she had known him when they were children.
─ GO. If people turn out for an event, they go to be there or to watch. CF. TURN UP (somewhere).
  • Thousands of people turned out to welcome the team home.

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