A2 verb #404 가장 일반적인 3분 분량

relate

To find a connection between things or to understand how someone else feels.

내 수준에 맞는 설명:

When you relate, you connect things. You can say: 'This picture relates to that picture.' It means they are the same or they go together. You can also use it for feelings. If you are sad and your friend is sad, you can say: 'I relate to you.' It means you understand how they feel because you feel the same way.

You use relate to show how two things are connected. For example, 'The book relates to my life.' This means the book and your life are similar. It is also very common to say, 'I can relate to that.' Use this when someone tells you a story and you have had the same experience. It is a very friendly way to show you are listening and you understand.

In intermediate English, relate is used to explain connections between ideas or to express personal empathy. You might say, 'The teacher related the lesson to our daily lives,' which means she showed us how the information is useful. Alternatively, when discussing movies or books, you might say, 'I couldn't relate to the main character,' meaning you didn't understand their motivations or actions. It is a key word for building rapport in conversations.

At the B2 level, relate is often used in more nuanced ways, such as 'relating' information to a specific context or 'relating' events to one another to form a narrative. The phrase 'relate to' is essential for expressing shared experiences in social settings. You might say, 'It is difficult to relate to the challenges faced by people in different cultures,' highlighting a lack of shared experience. It is a versatile verb that bridges the gap between objective analysis and subjective feeling.

Advanced speakers use relate to describe complex causal connections or to articulate deep psychological empathy. In academic contexts, you might 'relate' findings to a broader theoretical framework. In literary or social commentary, you might discuss how an author 'relates' the protagonist's internal struggle to the external environment. The word suggests a sophisticated ability to synthesize information and perceive underlying patterns in both data and human behavior.

At the C2 level, relate carries the weight of its etymological roots—'to carry back'—often used in formal narratives to mean 'to recount' or 'to narrate'. You might hear, 'He related the history of the family with great detail.' Beyond this, it implies a mastery of establishing logical coherence between disparate concepts. Whether you are relating a minor anecdote to a grand historical event or expressing a profound sense of kinship with a stranger, the word demonstrates a high level of linguistic precision and emotional intelligence.

30초 단어

  • Relate means to connect things logically.
  • It also means to feel empathy for someone.
  • Always use 'to' when talking about feelings.
  • It is a versatile and common verb.

Hey there! Let's talk about the word relate. It is one of those super handy verbs that does double duty in English. At its core, it is all about connection.

First, you use it when you are connecting two things together. For example, you might try to relate the recent rise in temperatures to climate change. You are showing that one thing is linked to the other.

Second, and this is the part people use all the time in conversation, it means to empathize. When a friend tells you a story about a bad day and you say, 'I totally relate,' you are saying that you have been in that exact same spot. It is a powerful way to build social bonds!

The word relate has a fascinating history that takes us back to the Latin language. It comes from the word relatus, which is the past participle of referre, meaning 'to bring back' or 'to carry back'.

Think about it: when you relate one thing to another, you are essentially 'carrying' information from one topic back to another to show how they match. It entered English in the late 16th century. Originally, it was used more in the sense of 'telling a story' or 'reporting'—you were 'bringing back' information to an audience.

Over the centuries, the meaning shifted from just 'telling' to 'connecting'. It is a great example of how language evolves to suit our social needs. We stopped just reporting facts and started using the word to report on our own internal feelings and connections to others.

You will hear relate used in two main ways. The first is formal: 'How do you relate these two concepts?' This is common in academic or professional writing.

The second is casual: 'I really relate to that character.' This is the standard way to express empathy. You will often see it paired with the preposition to. You 'relate to' something or someone.

It is important to note that while 'relate' is quite versatile, it is almost always followed by 'to' when talking about personal feelings. If you are being formal, you might 'relate A to B' without the 'to' in some specific structures, but keep it simple: relate to is your best friend in daily life.

While 'relate' itself is a verb, it appears in several common phrases:

  • Relate to: To understand or feel sympathy. 'I really relate to your struggle.'
  • Relate back to: To trace something to its origin. 'This problem relates back to the budget cuts.'
  • Relate a story: To tell or narrate an event. 'He related a funny story about his trip.'
  • Relate the facts: To present information accurately. 'Please relate the facts as you saw them.'
  • Hard to relate to: When something is confusing or distant. 'That movie was hard to relate to.'

Pronunciation-wise, it is /rɪˈleɪt/. The stress is on the second syllable. It rhymes with plate, skate, mate, gate, and late.

Grammatically, it is a regular verb. The past tense is related and the present participle is relating. Note the drop of the 'e' when adding '-ing'.

When using it to mean 'empathize', it is an intransitive verb followed by 'to'. When using it to mean 'connect', it is often transitive, taking an object before the 'to' phrase. Example: 'She related (verb) the findings (object) to (prep) the theory (noun).'

재미있는 사실

It originally meant to tell a story or report news.

발음 가이드

영국식 /rɪˈleɪt/

Clear 'r' and long 'a' sound.

미국식 /rɪˈleɪt/

Slightly more relaxed 't' sound.

자주 하는 실수

  • Pronouncing 'relate' as 're-lat'
  • Stressing the first syllable
  • Adding an extra vowel at the end

라임이 맞는 단어

plate skate mate gate late

난이도

독해 1/5

Easy to understand

쓰기 2/5

Requires correct prep

말하기 2/5

Natural in conversation

듣기 1/5

Clear sound

다음에 무엇을 배울까

선수 학습

connect feel story

다음에 배울 것

empathize recount correlate

고급

interrelate correlation affinity

알아야 할 문법

Transitive vs Intransitive

Relate (trans) vs Relate to (intrans)

Prepositional Phrases

Relate to someone

Regular Verb Conjugation

Relate, Related, Relating

수준별 예문

1

This relates to that.

This connects to that.

Simple subject-verb-prep.

2

I relate to you.

I understand your feeling.

Intransitive usage.

3

They relate.

They are connected.

Basic verb.

4

Relate the dots.

Connect the dots.

Imperative.

5

Can you relate?

Do you understand?

Question form.

6

We relate well.

We get along.

Adverb usage.

7

It relates to me.

It is about me.

Prepositional phrase.

8

Do not relate it.

Do not connect it.

Negative command.

1

I can really relate to that story.

2

How does this relate to the plan?

3

She relates well to her students.

4

The report relates to our sales.

5

I find it hard to relate to him.

6

Can you relate your experience to mine?

7

These two issues relate to each other.

8

He relates his success to hard work.

1

The study relates rising costs to inflation.

2

Many people relate to the themes in the movie.

3

She tried to relate the events of the night.

4

Does this data relate to the current project?

5

I relate to the feeling of being lonely.

6

He could not relate his ideas to the team.

7

The essay relates the poem to nature.

8

We need to relate these facts properly.

1

It is easy to relate to the characters in this novel.

2

The professor related the discovery to earlier research.

3

She struggled to relate to the new office culture.

4

He related the history of the company in detail.

5

Can you relate these findings to the broader context?

6

They relate to each other through music.

7

The article relates the decline to poor management.

8

I can relate to the pressure you are feeling.

1

The author relates the protagonist's trauma to his childhood.

2

He related the anecdote with a sense of irony.

3

The theory relates social behavior to economic status.

4

I struggle to relate to such extreme viewpoints.

5

She related the events in chronological order.

6

The findings relate directly to our hypothesis.

7

He relates well to people from all backgrounds.

8

The historian relates the war to political instability.

1

He related the epic tale with great passion.

2

The philosopher relates the concept of time to perception.

3

One must relate the individual experience to the collective.

4

She relates to the plight of the marginalized.

5

The report relates the incident to a series of errors.

6

He relates his artistic style to classical traditions.

7

It is a story that relates the human condition.

8

She relates to the struggle of the artist.

동의어

반의어

disconnect separate detach

자주 쓰는 조합

relate to
relate well
relate the story
relate facts
hard to relate
relate directly
relate closely
relate experience
relate findings
relate to others

관용어 및 표현

"relate to"

To feel empathy for

I really relate to your stress.

neutral

"relate back to"

To trace to an origin

This relates back to our first meeting.

neutral

"can relate"

I have felt that too

I can relate!

casual

"hard to relate"

Difficult to understand

That character is hard to relate to.

neutral

"relate the events"

To tell what happened

He related the events of the day.

formal

"relate to someone"

To build a bond

She knows how to relate to people.

neutral

혼동하기 쉬운

relate Relate vs. Relative

Similar roots

Relate is a verb; Relative is a noun/adjective.

I relate to my relative.

relate Relate vs. Relate to

Preposition usage

Relate is for connecting things; Relate to is for feelings.

Relate the facts vs. Relate to the person.

relate Relate vs. Connect

Synonyms

Relate is more about logic/empathy; Connect is physical/general.

Connect wires vs. Relate ideas.

relate Relate vs. Relate back

Phrasal verb

Relate back is specifically about origins.

Relate the story vs. Relate it back to the start.

문장 패턴

A1

Subject + relate + to + noun

I relate to him.

B1

Subject + relate + object + to + object

She relates the story to the book.

A2

It is hard to relate to + noun

It is hard to relate to this.

B2

Subject + relate + well + to + noun

He relates well to students.

C1

Subject + relate + directly + to + noun

This relates directly to us.

어휘 가족

명사

relation A connection or family member

동사

interrelate To relate to each other

형용사

related Connected by family or logic

관련

relative Family member or comparison

사용법

frequency

8/10

격식 수준

Recount (formal) Connect (neutral) Relate to (casual)

💡

The 'To' Rule

Always use 'to' for feelings.

💡

Avoid 'I am relate'

Use 'I relate'.

💡

Etymology

It meant 'to bring back'.

💡

Context

Practice with personal stories.

💡

Stress

Stress the second syllable.

🌍

Social Bonding

Use it to show empathy.

💡

Verb Forms

Regular verb endings.

💡

Mnemonic

Connect the dots.

💡

Academic

Use for logical links.

💡

Flashcards

Use 'relate to' as a block.

암기하기

기억법

RE-LATE: REpeat the LATE story to connect it.

시각적 연상

Two hands shaking.

Word Web

empathy connection story link

챌린지

Use 'I relate to that' today.

어원

Latin

원래 의미: To carry back

문화적 맥락

None, it is a neutral word.

Very common in social settings to show support.

'I relate to that' is a common meme phrase.

실생활에서 연습하기

실제 사용 상황

At work

  • relate to the project
  • relate the data
  • relate well to the team

In school

  • relate the lesson
  • relate to the text
  • relate ideas

Socializing

  • I can relate
  • relate to my struggle
  • relate to others

Writing

  • relate the findings
  • relate the events
  • relate back to the theme

대화 시작하기

"What is something you can really relate to?"

"How do you relate your work to your hobbies?"

"Do you find it easy to relate to new people?"

"Can you relate a story from your childhood?"

"Why do we relate to sad movies?"

일기 주제

Write about a time you related to a stranger.

How does your current goal relate to your future?

Describe a character you relate to in a book.

Why is it important to relate to others?

자주 묻는 질문

8 질문

When it means empathize, yes.

No, say 'I relate' or 'I am related'.

It can be both formal and casual.

Use it to show links between ideas.

No, 'related' means family.

Yes, to show they are connected.

Relation or relationship.

Very common.

셀프 테스트

fill blank A1

I ___ to your story.

정답! 아쉬워요. 정답: relate

Simple present.

multiple choice A2

Which means to understand?

정답! 아쉬워요. 정답: relate to

The preposition is 'to'.

true false B1

Relate is a noun.

정답! 아쉬워요. 정답: 거짓

It is a verb.

match pairs B1

Word

모두 맞췄어요!

Synonyms match.

sentence order B2

아래 단어를 탭해서 문장을 만들어 보세요
정답! 아쉬워요. 정답:

Subject-verb-prep-object.

점수: /5

관련 콘텐츠

맥락에서 배우기

Social 관련 단어

abanthropate

C1

Describes a state of being removed from, or having lost, the essential qualities and characteristics of humanity. It is often used in philosophical or literary contexts to describe a person or entity that has transcended or been alienated from the human condition.

abhospence

C1

A rare or formal term describing the state or act of lacking hospitality, or the deliberate withdrawal of a welcoming attitude towards guests or outsiders. It refers to a cold, inhospitable atmosphere or a specific instance where a host fails to provide expected comforts or kindness.

abjudtude

C1

The state or quality of being formally rejected, cast off, or disowned through an authoritative or judicial decision. It refers to a condition of absolute renunciation where a person or entity is stripped of their previous status or rights.

abphobship

C1

A formal adjective describing a systemic and deep-seated aversion to institutional hierarchies or organized authority figures. It is frequently applied in sociological and organizational contexts to describe individuals or movements that intentionally distance themselves from formal power structures.

abstinence

B2

술이나 음식처럼 유혹이 되는 것들을 스스로 끊기로 결심하는 거야. 자기 절제력이 필요한 행동이지.

abtactship

C1

물리적인 접촉이 없거나 만질 수 없는 상태를 말해요. 물질적이거나 신체적이지 않은 관계를 묘사할 때 사용해요.

abtrudship

C1

To forcefully impose one's leadership, authority, or specific set of rules onto a group without their consent or prior consultation. It describes the act of thrusting a structured way of doing things upon others in a dominant or intrusive manner.

abvictious

C1

To strategically yield or concede a minor position or advantage in order to ensure a greater ultimate victory. It describes a sophisticated form of success achieved through intentional, calculated loss or withdrawal.

abvolism

C1

완전한 개인적 자율성을 얻기 위해 사회적 규범에서 의도적으로 거리를 두는 것을 의미해요.

acceptance

B2

Acceptance is the act of agreeing to an offer, plan, or invitation, or the process of being received into a group or society. It also refers to the willingness to tolerate a difficult situation or the state of being approved by others.

도움이 되었나요?
아직 댓글이 없습니다. 첫 번째로 생각을 공유하세요!