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Newguest Posted 13 years ago
Vocabulary

At the wonder of it all

Hi

I'd like to ask about the phrase "at the wonder of it all".

A few seconds later she caused the grove to reappear, and from the way the little girl leapt to her feet and rushed around touching the trees, Watson was certain that she had shared the experience also. But Tia was not finished. She caused the grove to blink on and off several times as both she and the little girl linked hands, dancing and giggling at the wonder of it all. Watson simply walked away, his head reeling.

So, what does "at the wonder of it all" above mean? Maybe "admiring what was happening"?
  

Top answer

'The wonder of it all' is not an idiom; it is just a fixed phrase. It means 'the wonder that everything is producing in the viewer'.

  • 'The wonder of it all' is not an idiom; it is just a fixed phrase.
  • It means 'the wonder that everything is producing in the viewer'.
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1 Answers
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'The wonder of it all' is not an idiom; it is just a fixed phrase. It means 'the wonder that everything is producing in the viewer'.

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