那个
... dictionary n. 字典;词典 that pron. 那;那个 yes adv (表示肯定)是 ...
那种
我顿然想哭,是那种(That)有点冤枉,有点支拨了许多热心却被萧条后的忧伤。然则我没哭出来,也没掉泪(Tears),我不过关了门,生姑娘有什么不好?
指出
信息指出(That):“云顶团体曾经在今年初派员前去斯里兰卡实行视察。”
接招 ; 接招合唱团 ; 接招乐队 ; 接招组合
也就是说 ; 就是说 ; 那就是说 ; 即
爵士春秋 ; 诸如此类 ; 浮生若梦 ; 美妙的爵士
That is function word used in the English language for several grammatical purposes.These include:In the first two uses the word is usually pronounced weakly, as /ðət/, whereas in the other uses it is pronounced /ðæt/.In the Old English language that was spelled þæt. It was also abbreviated as a letter Thorn, þ, with the ascender crossed, ꝥ ( ). In Middle English the letter Ash, æ, was replaced with the letter a, so that that was spelled þat, or sometimes þet. The ascender of the þ was reduced (making it similar to the Old English letter Wynn, ƿ), which necessitated writing a small t above the letter to abbreviate the word that ( ). In later Middle English and Early Modern English the þ evolved into a y shape, so that the word was spelled yat (although the spelling with a th replacing the þ was starting to become more popular) and the abbreviation for that was a y with a small t above it ( ). This abbreviation can still be seen in reprints of the 1611 edition of the King James Version of the Bible in places such as 2 Corinthians 13:7.That is often omitted when used to introduce a subordinate clause—"He told me that it is a good read." could just as easily be "He told me it is a good read." Historically, "that" usually followed a comma: "He told me, that it is a good read." Middle Modern English grammarian Joseph Robertson recommended in On Punctuation that a comma be used with a conjunction. However, if the subordinate, conjunctional ellipse, null complement, or syntactic pleonasm of "that" is punctuated with a comma, then, in the English grammar, stylistically speaking, it is a comma splice, especially in formal writing. Instead, a semicolon should be used to be grammatically correct: He told me; it is a good read. In grammar, the usage of "that" constitutes a that-clause while its absence constitutes a bare clause.