harvard

harvard — noun

1. John Harvard (1607–1638) was an English-born American religious leader. He gave

1.名詞B1
釋義

John Harvard (1607–1638) was an English-born American religious leader. He gave his collection of books and half of his money and property to a new college in 1638. The college was later named Harvard University after him.

例句

John Harvard left his collection of four hundred books and seven hundred pounds to a new school in 1638.

named + verb + object; historical fact pattern

A statue of John Harvard sits in Harvard Yard, but it was modelled after a student, not the clergyman himself.

用法筆記

In everyday conversation, 'Harvard' almost always refers to the university. To refer unambiguously to the historical figure, say 'John Harvard'. Taiwan learners already know the university as 哈佛大學, so adding his first name in English or saying 約翰·哈佛 in Chinese prevents confusion.

常見錯誤

❗ 'Harvard was a famous university in the 1600s.' ✅ 'John Harvard was a clergyman who helped fund what later became Harvard University.' — the person and the institution are different referents.