"Fresh" Forest of Dean.
Geoff Bannister
gbannister10 at tiscali.co.uk
Fri Feb 27 07:39:56 UTC 2009
--- In HPFGU-OTChatter at yahoogroups.com, "zanooda2" <zanooda2 at ...> wrote:
>
> Guys, please tell me what the word "fresh" means in a sentence like
> that: "'Where are we?' he asked, peering around at a fresh mass of
> trees ...". It's right after Harry and Hermione Apparated to the
> Forest of Dean (ch.19, "The Silver Doe", p.364 Am.ed.). Does it mean
> something like "new", "another", or is it some characteristic of the
> trees, like "green" (in winter??) or whatever else. I would appreciate
> any advice :-).
>
>
> zanooda
Geoff:
I would read it as "new" or "different". For example: "He picked up a fresh
file from the pile on the desk" or even"We had a fresh teacher for DADA
today".
;-)
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