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“seeing as you don't know anyone but me” meaning in this context
What does “his warm weight” refer to in this context?“Get out of that one” meaning in this context?“almost lovingly apart” meaning in this contextHow to understand “I suppose it varies, just like with wizards?” in this contextHow to understand “Don't you go feeling guilty!” in this context“Too right it has,” meaning in this context“It's stressful this managing lark, …” meaning“spot yours” meaning in the context“There was too much truth in this to ignore” meaning in this contextHow to understand “in it” in this context
"I didn't want anyone to talk to me," said Harry, who was feeling more and more nettled.
"Well, that was a bit stupid of you," said Ginny angrily, "seeing as you don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, and I can tell you how it feels."
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
I don't quite get the meaning "seeing as you don't know anyone but me" in this context. Probably, the phrase "seeing as" confuses me. How should we understand it here?
meaning-in-context
add a comment |
"I didn't want anyone to talk to me," said Harry, who was feeling more and more nettled.
"Well, that was a bit stupid of you," said Ginny angrily, "seeing as you don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, and I can tell you how it feels."
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
I don't quite get the meaning "seeing as you don't know anyone but me" in this context. Probably, the phrase "seeing as" confuses me. How should we understand it here?
meaning-in-context
It might help to understand seeing here as preceded by an implied but unstated since I / you / we are [seeing] - another way of saying because I / you / we / everyone / etc. can see that [blah blah]. And but here is just a (today, somewhat affected / mock-archaic) alternative to except.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 14:56
2
...getting more finely-nuanced, you might wish to note that seeing as / that X is actually closer to bearing X in mind, taking account of X rather than simply because [of] X.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 15:02
add a comment |
"I didn't want anyone to talk to me," said Harry, who was feeling more and more nettled.
"Well, that was a bit stupid of you," said Ginny angrily, "seeing as you don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, and I can tell you how it feels."
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
I don't quite get the meaning "seeing as you don't know anyone but me" in this context. Probably, the phrase "seeing as" confuses me. How should we understand it here?
meaning-in-context
"I didn't want anyone to talk to me," said Harry, who was feeling more and more nettled.
"Well, that was a bit stupid of you," said Ginny angrily, "seeing as you don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, and I can tell you how it feels."
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
I don't quite get the meaning "seeing as you don't know anyone but me" in this context. Probably, the phrase "seeing as" confuses me. How should we understand it here?
meaning-in-context
meaning-in-context
asked Mar 6 at 12:00
dandan
5,42122878
5,42122878
It might help to understand seeing here as preceded by an implied but unstated since I / you / we are [seeing] - another way of saying because I / you / we / everyone / etc. can see that [blah blah]. And but here is just a (today, somewhat affected / mock-archaic) alternative to except.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 14:56
2
...getting more finely-nuanced, you might wish to note that seeing as / that X is actually closer to bearing X in mind, taking account of X rather than simply because [of] X.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 15:02
add a comment |
It might help to understand seeing here as preceded by an implied but unstated since I / you / we are [seeing] - another way of saying because I / you / we / everyone / etc. can see that [blah blah]. And but here is just a (today, somewhat affected / mock-archaic) alternative to except.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 14:56
2
...getting more finely-nuanced, you might wish to note that seeing as / that X is actually closer to bearing X in mind, taking account of X rather than simply because [of] X.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 15:02
It might help to understand seeing here as preceded by an implied but unstated since I / you / we are [seeing] - another way of saying because I / you / we / everyone / etc. can see that [blah blah]. And but here is just a (today, somewhat affected / mock-archaic) alternative to except.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 14:56
It might help to understand seeing here as preceded by an implied but unstated since I / you / we are [seeing] - another way of saying because I / you / we / everyone / etc. can see that [blah blah]. And but here is just a (today, somewhat affected / mock-archaic) alternative to except.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 14:56
2
2
...getting more finely-nuanced, you might wish to note that seeing as / that X is actually closer to bearing X in mind, taking account of X rather than simply because [of] X.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 15:02
...getting more finely-nuanced, you might wish to note that seeing as / that X is actually closer to bearing X in mind, taking account of X rather than simply because [of] X.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 15:02
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
The phrase "seeing as" is a way of introducing a fact. The sentence could have used other words that convey the same idea, e.g.:
considering that you don't know anyone but me
It just means that Ginny is explaining why Harry was stupid for not talking to her.
As for the "anyone but me" part, that is Ginny's way of saying that she is the only person that Harry knows who has had this experience. She is saying that Harry doesn't know anyone who could help him here except for her. She can help him because she has also been possessed by Voldemort before.
add a comment |
It is essentially the same as "given that". It introduces some fact that is essential to a question or situation. Sometimes this is the same as giving a reason, as it is here - the reason that it was stupid of Harry not to talk to Ginny is that she had experienced being possessed by Voldemort. Given that she had experienced that, and could thus tell him what it felt like, he should have spoken to her if he was worried that that was happening.
Ginny is stating the fact that she is the only person Harry knows who has been possessed by Voldemort, and that he is therefore stupid for not talking to her about it.
Thanks! But I still not quite sure how to understand "you don't know anyone but me". How can we get it to make sense for the context? Is it like saying "you only knows me who have experienced being possessed by Voldemort"?
– dan
Mar 6 at 13:23
"You don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who." She's the only person he knows who has been possessed by You-Know-Who. It could be rephrased "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, other than me".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:07
5
Or, to rephrase it without the negative modifiers, "Out of all the people you know, I am the only one who has been possessed by You-Know-Who."
– Hellion
Mar 6 at 14:35
Well-put, @Hellion, thank you.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:47
Edited to add a clearer final summary.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:48
add a comment |
"Seeing as" is a synonymous phrase of "Because".
Your example can also be interpreted as
"Well, that was a bit stupid of you," said Ginny angrily, "because, you don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, and I can tell you how it feels."
New contributor
eefar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I'm still unclear what the whole sentence is trying to convey. Can you explain a bit more?
– dan
Mar 6 at 12:26
2
Welcome to ELL. I would say it's not quite the same as "because", more like "given that". The difference is subtle, though - you wouldn't use "because" in the situations (especially questions) that you would use "seeing as" or "given that".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 12:44
add a comment |
"A, seeing as B" means "seeing B shows why A is true". "but" means "except". We can also move the "but me" around, giving "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who except me, and that shows you not wanting to talk to me to be stupid" or "other than me, you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who". The "but me" isn't separate from "who's been possessed by You-Know-Who"; Ginny is saying she is the only person that Harry knows AND who has been possessed by You-Know-Who.
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The phrase "seeing as" is a way of introducing a fact. The sentence could have used other words that convey the same idea, e.g.:
considering that you don't know anyone but me
It just means that Ginny is explaining why Harry was stupid for not talking to her.
As for the "anyone but me" part, that is Ginny's way of saying that she is the only person that Harry knows who has had this experience. She is saying that Harry doesn't know anyone who could help him here except for her. She can help him because she has also been possessed by Voldemort before.
add a comment |
The phrase "seeing as" is a way of introducing a fact. The sentence could have used other words that convey the same idea, e.g.:
considering that you don't know anyone but me
It just means that Ginny is explaining why Harry was stupid for not talking to her.
As for the "anyone but me" part, that is Ginny's way of saying that she is the only person that Harry knows who has had this experience. She is saying that Harry doesn't know anyone who could help him here except for her. She can help him because she has also been possessed by Voldemort before.
add a comment |
The phrase "seeing as" is a way of introducing a fact. The sentence could have used other words that convey the same idea, e.g.:
considering that you don't know anyone but me
It just means that Ginny is explaining why Harry was stupid for not talking to her.
As for the "anyone but me" part, that is Ginny's way of saying that she is the only person that Harry knows who has had this experience. She is saying that Harry doesn't know anyone who could help him here except for her. She can help him because she has also been possessed by Voldemort before.
The phrase "seeing as" is a way of introducing a fact. The sentence could have used other words that convey the same idea, e.g.:
considering that you don't know anyone but me
It just means that Ginny is explaining why Harry was stupid for not talking to her.
As for the "anyone but me" part, that is Ginny's way of saying that she is the only person that Harry knows who has had this experience. She is saying that Harry doesn't know anyone who could help him here except for her. She can help him because she has also been possessed by Voldemort before.
answered Mar 6 at 14:38
AlexAlex
1,107210
1,107210
add a comment |
add a comment |
It is essentially the same as "given that". It introduces some fact that is essential to a question or situation. Sometimes this is the same as giving a reason, as it is here - the reason that it was stupid of Harry not to talk to Ginny is that she had experienced being possessed by Voldemort. Given that she had experienced that, and could thus tell him what it felt like, he should have spoken to her if he was worried that that was happening.
Ginny is stating the fact that she is the only person Harry knows who has been possessed by Voldemort, and that he is therefore stupid for not talking to her about it.
Thanks! But I still not quite sure how to understand "you don't know anyone but me". How can we get it to make sense for the context? Is it like saying "you only knows me who have experienced being possessed by Voldemort"?
– dan
Mar 6 at 13:23
"You don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who." She's the only person he knows who has been possessed by You-Know-Who. It could be rephrased "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, other than me".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:07
5
Or, to rephrase it without the negative modifiers, "Out of all the people you know, I am the only one who has been possessed by You-Know-Who."
– Hellion
Mar 6 at 14:35
Well-put, @Hellion, thank you.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:47
Edited to add a clearer final summary.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:48
add a comment |
It is essentially the same as "given that". It introduces some fact that is essential to a question or situation. Sometimes this is the same as giving a reason, as it is here - the reason that it was stupid of Harry not to talk to Ginny is that she had experienced being possessed by Voldemort. Given that she had experienced that, and could thus tell him what it felt like, he should have spoken to her if he was worried that that was happening.
Ginny is stating the fact that she is the only person Harry knows who has been possessed by Voldemort, and that he is therefore stupid for not talking to her about it.
Thanks! But I still not quite sure how to understand "you don't know anyone but me". How can we get it to make sense for the context? Is it like saying "you only knows me who have experienced being possessed by Voldemort"?
– dan
Mar 6 at 13:23
"You don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who." She's the only person he knows who has been possessed by You-Know-Who. It could be rephrased "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, other than me".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:07
5
Or, to rephrase it without the negative modifiers, "Out of all the people you know, I am the only one who has been possessed by You-Know-Who."
– Hellion
Mar 6 at 14:35
Well-put, @Hellion, thank you.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:47
Edited to add a clearer final summary.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:48
add a comment |
It is essentially the same as "given that". It introduces some fact that is essential to a question or situation. Sometimes this is the same as giving a reason, as it is here - the reason that it was stupid of Harry not to talk to Ginny is that she had experienced being possessed by Voldemort. Given that she had experienced that, and could thus tell him what it felt like, he should have spoken to her if he was worried that that was happening.
Ginny is stating the fact that she is the only person Harry knows who has been possessed by Voldemort, and that he is therefore stupid for not talking to her about it.
It is essentially the same as "given that". It introduces some fact that is essential to a question or situation. Sometimes this is the same as giving a reason, as it is here - the reason that it was stupid of Harry not to talk to Ginny is that she had experienced being possessed by Voldemort. Given that she had experienced that, and could thus tell him what it felt like, he should have spoken to her if he was worried that that was happening.
Ginny is stating the fact that she is the only person Harry knows who has been possessed by Voldemort, and that he is therefore stupid for not talking to her about it.
edited Mar 6 at 14:48
answered Mar 6 at 12:48
SamBCSamBC
10.6k1539
10.6k1539
Thanks! But I still not quite sure how to understand "you don't know anyone but me". How can we get it to make sense for the context? Is it like saying "you only knows me who have experienced being possessed by Voldemort"?
– dan
Mar 6 at 13:23
"You don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who." She's the only person he knows who has been possessed by You-Know-Who. It could be rephrased "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, other than me".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:07
5
Or, to rephrase it without the negative modifiers, "Out of all the people you know, I am the only one who has been possessed by You-Know-Who."
– Hellion
Mar 6 at 14:35
Well-put, @Hellion, thank you.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:47
Edited to add a clearer final summary.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:48
add a comment |
Thanks! But I still not quite sure how to understand "you don't know anyone but me". How can we get it to make sense for the context? Is it like saying "you only knows me who have experienced being possessed by Voldemort"?
– dan
Mar 6 at 13:23
"You don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who." She's the only person he knows who has been possessed by You-Know-Who. It could be rephrased "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, other than me".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:07
5
Or, to rephrase it without the negative modifiers, "Out of all the people you know, I am the only one who has been possessed by You-Know-Who."
– Hellion
Mar 6 at 14:35
Well-put, @Hellion, thank you.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:47
Edited to add a clearer final summary.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:48
Thanks! But I still not quite sure how to understand "you don't know anyone but me". How can we get it to make sense for the context? Is it like saying "you only knows me who have experienced being possessed by Voldemort"?
– dan
Mar 6 at 13:23
Thanks! But I still not quite sure how to understand "you don't know anyone but me". How can we get it to make sense for the context? Is it like saying "you only knows me who have experienced being possessed by Voldemort"?
– dan
Mar 6 at 13:23
"You don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who." She's the only person he knows who has been possessed by You-Know-Who. It could be rephrased "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, other than me".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:07
"You don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who." She's the only person he knows who has been possessed by You-Know-Who. It could be rephrased "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, other than me".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:07
5
5
Or, to rephrase it without the negative modifiers, "Out of all the people you know, I am the only one who has been possessed by You-Know-Who."
– Hellion
Mar 6 at 14:35
Or, to rephrase it without the negative modifiers, "Out of all the people you know, I am the only one who has been possessed by You-Know-Who."
– Hellion
Mar 6 at 14:35
Well-put, @Hellion, thank you.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:47
Well-put, @Hellion, thank you.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:47
Edited to add a clearer final summary.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:48
Edited to add a clearer final summary.
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 14:48
add a comment |
"Seeing as" is a synonymous phrase of "Because".
Your example can also be interpreted as
"Well, that was a bit stupid of you," said Ginny angrily, "because, you don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, and I can tell you how it feels."
New contributor
eefar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I'm still unclear what the whole sentence is trying to convey. Can you explain a bit more?
– dan
Mar 6 at 12:26
2
Welcome to ELL. I would say it's not quite the same as "because", more like "given that". The difference is subtle, though - you wouldn't use "because" in the situations (especially questions) that you would use "seeing as" or "given that".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 12:44
add a comment |
"Seeing as" is a synonymous phrase of "Because".
Your example can also be interpreted as
"Well, that was a bit stupid of you," said Ginny angrily, "because, you don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, and I can tell you how it feels."
New contributor
eefar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I'm still unclear what the whole sentence is trying to convey. Can you explain a bit more?
– dan
Mar 6 at 12:26
2
Welcome to ELL. I would say it's not quite the same as "because", more like "given that". The difference is subtle, though - you wouldn't use "because" in the situations (especially questions) that you would use "seeing as" or "given that".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 12:44
add a comment |
"Seeing as" is a synonymous phrase of "Because".
Your example can also be interpreted as
"Well, that was a bit stupid of you," said Ginny angrily, "because, you don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, and I can tell you how it feels."
New contributor
eefar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
"Seeing as" is a synonymous phrase of "Because".
Your example can also be interpreted as
"Well, that was a bit stupid of you," said Ginny angrily, "because, you don't know anyone but me who's been possessed by You-Know-Who, and I can tell you how it feels."
New contributor
eefar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited Mar 6 at 21:23
DJMcMayhem
4,59811635
4,59811635
New contributor
eefar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
answered Mar 6 at 12:15
eefareefar
3367
3367
New contributor
eefar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
eefar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
eefar is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I'm still unclear what the whole sentence is trying to convey. Can you explain a bit more?
– dan
Mar 6 at 12:26
2
Welcome to ELL. I would say it's not quite the same as "because", more like "given that". The difference is subtle, though - you wouldn't use "because" in the situations (especially questions) that you would use "seeing as" or "given that".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 12:44
add a comment |
I'm still unclear what the whole sentence is trying to convey. Can you explain a bit more?
– dan
Mar 6 at 12:26
2
Welcome to ELL. I would say it's not quite the same as "because", more like "given that". The difference is subtle, though - you wouldn't use "because" in the situations (especially questions) that you would use "seeing as" or "given that".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 12:44
I'm still unclear what the whole sentence is trying to convey. Can you explain a bit more?
– dan
Mar 6 at 12:26
I'm still unclear what the whole sentence is trying to convey. Can you explain a bit more?
– dan
Mar 6 at 12:26
2
2
Welcome to ELL. I would say it's not quite the same as "because", more like "given that". The difference is subtle, though - you wouldn't use "because" in the situations (especially questions) that you would use "seeing as" or "given that".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 12:44
Welcome to ELL. I would say it's not quite the same as "because", more like "given that". The difference is subtle, though - you wouldn't use "because" in the situations (especially questions) that you would use "seeing as" or "given that".
– SamBC
Mar 6 at 12:44
add a comment |
"A, seeing as B" means "seeing B shows why A is true". "but" means "except". We can also move the "but me" around, giving "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who except me, and that shows you not wanting to talk to me to be stupid" or "other than me, you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who". The "but me" isn't separate from "who's been possessed by You-Know-Who"; Ginny is saying she is the only person that Harry knows AND who has been possessed by You-Know-Who.
add a comment |
"A, seeing as B" means "seeing B shows why A is true". "but" means "except". We can also move the "but me" around, giving "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who except me, and that shows you not wanting to talk to me to be stupid" or "other than me, you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who". The "but me" isn't separate from "who's been possessed by You-Know-Who"; Ginny is saying she is the only person that Harry knows AND who has been possessed by You-Know-Who.
add a comment |
"A, seeing as B" means "seeing B shows why A is true". "but" means "except". We can also move the "but me" around, giving "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who except me, and that shows you not wanting to talk to me to be stupid" or "other than me, you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who". The "but me" isn't separate from "who's been possessed by You-Know-Who"; Ginny is saying she is the only person that Harry knows AND who has been possessed by You-Know-Who.
"A, seeing as B" means "seeing B shows why A is true". "but" means "except". We can also move the "but me" around, giving "you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who except me, and that shows you not wanting to talk to me to be stupid" or "other than me, you don't know anyone who's been possessed by You-Know-Who". The "but me" isn't separate from "who's been possessed by You-Know-Who"; Ginny is saying she is the only person that Harry knows AND who has been possessed by You-Know-Who.
answered Mar 6 at 16:50
AcccumulationAcccumulation
1,38016
1,38016
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It might help to understand seeing here as preceded by an implied but unstated since I / you / we are [seeing] - another way of saying because I / you / we / everyone / etc. can see that [blah blah]. And but here is just a (today, somewhat affected / mock-archaic) alternative to except.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 14:56
2
...getting more finely-nuanced, you might wish to note that seeing as / that X is actually closer to bearing X in mind, taking account of X rather than simply because [of] X.
– FumbleFingers
Mar 6 at 15:02