2025. Reading Is An Intelligent Sport.
Our mission is to make everything about sentences.
Please stay here and make your dreams.
지문 분석결과
fico가 지문 학습에 필요한 것들을 구성하여 학습 효율성을 제공해 드립니다.
노트나 질문을 통해 자신만의 지문 노트를 만들어 관리해 보세요.
Reading Expert 3(2020)
Reading Expert 3(2020)
Reading Expert 3(2020)
UNIT 12 - READING 2 Walden (by Henry David Thoreau)
print
지문 전체 문장
문장을 클릭하면 해당 문장의 구문 분석 내용을 보여줍니다.
UNIT 12 - READING 2 Walden (by Henry David Thoreau)
"In proportion as he simplifies his life, the laws of the universe will appear less complex, and solitude will not be solitude, nor poverty, nor weakness." "If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be." "Now put the foundations under them." Excerpt from Walden In 1845, Henry David Thoreau, a famous American writer, built a cabin next to Walden Pond, deep in the woods and far away from everyone else. He lived in the cabin for two years, two months and two days, later writing a book, called Walden, about his experience there. Thoreau felt it was necessary to live outside of society in order to fully understand it. His thoughts about society make up part of the book, focusing on his concern that people spent so much time trying to earn money that they couldn't appreciate being alive. Thoreau's advice to his readers was to spend more time thinking deeply about their lives. The rest of the book explains Thoreau's daily activities during the time he spent at Walden Pond. He often walked to the nearest town, and wrote about the people he met there. But Thoreau spent most of his time in nature, and that's what he wrote about the most. He described the squirrels he fed and the ants he watched fight against each other. When winter came, he wrote about how the lake froze over and men from the town came to gather the ice. And when winter ended, he joyously described the return of spring. Walden ends with Thoreau telling his readers to become explorers, though he did not mean that he wanted them to explore the world. Instead, he was urging them to explore the mysteries of their own thoughts and lives. Although written long ago, Thoreau's masterpiece still has a lot to teach us today.
지문 노트목록 지문단위의 해석이나 의미 등 내용에 대한 설명입니다.
지문에 대한 질문목록 이 지문과 관련된 질문이 있다면 이곳에서 등록해 보세요. (예를들면, 이 지문과 관련된 문제 풀이가 궁금할 때)
지문에 사용된 특정 문장에 대한 궁금증은 해당 문장의 헬프fico쌤에 등록하는 것이 좋습니다.
등록된 질문이 없습니다.
fico 문장 분석
이 지문에 대해 AI는 다음과 같은 문장들로 구분하였습니다.
문장 구분과 분석의 정확성을 높이려면 'fico 정확성을 높이려면'을 참고하세요
list_alt해석 목록
여러 AI의 해석들을 제공해 드립니다.
inventory_2단어 목록 ● 단어 목록에 OpenVocas로 등록된 구가 있습니다.
문장에서 등장하는 단어를 fico가 대신 검색하여 제공해 드립니다. 단어를 눌러서 발음을 들어보세요.
해당 문장에서 fico AI가 설정한 난이도 이상의 단어를 찾지 못했습니다.
sticky_note_2노트 메모
학습에 필요한 나만의 메모를 남겨보세요.
해당 문장에서 fico AI가 설정한 난이도 이상의 단어를 찾지 못했습니다.
듣기
상세한 구문 분석을 보고 싶은 문장을 선택하세요.
1 "In proportion as he simplifies his life, the laws of the universe will appear less complex, and solitude will not be solitude, nor poverty, nor weakness." 2 "If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be." 3 "Now put the foundations under them." 4 Excerpt from Walden In 1845, Henry David Thoreau, a famous American writer, built a cabin next to Walden Pond, deep in the woods and far away from everyone else. 5 He lived in the cabin for two years, two months and two days, later writing a book, called Walden, about his experience there. 6 Thoreau felt it was necessary to live outside of society in order to fully understand it. 7 His thoughts about society make up part of the book, focusing on his concern that people spent so much time trying to earn money that they couldn't appreciate being alive. 8 Thoreau's advice to his readers was to spend more time thinking deeply about their lives. 9 The rest of the book explains Thoreau's daily activities during the time he spent at Walden Pond. 10 He often walked to the nearest town, and wrote about the people he met there. 11 But Thoreau spent most of his time in nature, and that's what he wrote about the most. 12 He described the squirrels he fed and the ants he watched fight against each other. 13 When winter came, he wrote about how the lake froze over and men from the town came to gather the ice. 14 And when winter ended, he joyously described the return of spring. 15 Walden ends with Thoreau telling his readers to become explorers, though he did not mean that he wanted them to explore the world. 16 Instead, he was urging them to explore the mysteries of their own thoughts and lives. 17 Although written long ago, Thoreau's masterpiece still has a lot to teach us today.