somebody
somebody — 代名詞
1. an unknown or unnamed person; a word used when the speaker does not know or does
某人
身份不明或無須指明的人
an unknown or unnamed person; a word used when the speaker does not know or does not need to say who the person is
Somebody left their bag in the classroom this morning.
今天早上有人把包包忘在教室裡了。
somebody + possessive 'their' — unspecified owner
Can somebody help Hui carry these heavy boxes to the car?
有人可以幫 Hui 把這些重箱子搬到車上嗎?
question form: can somebody + infinitive
The letter was signed for by somebody at the front desk.
那封信是櫃檯有人簽收的。
Talia met somebody nice at the party last weekend.
Talia 上週末在派對上認識了一個很不錯的人。
There is somebody at the door who wants to speak with you.
門口有人想跟你說話。
文法句型
somebody + verb (singular)
somebody + else
somebody + relative clause
用法筆記
Somebody and someone have the same meaning and can be used in most of the same situations. Somebody is more common in everyday spoken English, while someone is slightly more frequent in formal writing. In negative sentences, use anybody instead: 'I did not see anybody there.'
常見錯誤
somebody — 名詞
1. an individual of importance or influence; someone who has achieved success, resp
大人物
地位重要或受人尊敬的人物
an individual of importance or influence; someone who has achieved success, respect, or a high standing in a particular field
The award made Felix feel like a real somebody for the first time.
那個獎項讓 Felix 第一次覺得自己真的是個人物。
feel like a somebody — sense of personal worth
In that industry, you need strong connections if you want to be somebody.
在那個行業裡,需要有強勁的人脈才能出人頭地。
Karim worked hard his whole life because he wanted to be somebody.
Karim 一生努力工作,因為他想成為一個有地位的人。
The hotel staff treated every guest like a somebody, no matter how much they paid.
那家旅館的員工把每位客人都當作大人物來招待,不論他們付了多少錢。
- important person
more formal and literal; used in neutral or official contexts
- big shot
informal, often slightly humorous or envious
- somebody special
focuses on personal significance rather than social status
文法句型
be + a somebody
feel like + a somebody
want to be + a somebody
用法筆記
This sense is always singular and appears with the indefinite article a (a somebody). It is used in positive or admiring contexts and directly contrasts with 'nobody', which means an unimportant person. The pattern 'feel like a somebody' is especially common in everyday speech.