PS: Delve into these free English learning lessons: Tutorial: Express Past — History of Anguilla — Although, though, but and however — Also, as well and too
- SchopinouOctober 2019
GIVE ANSWERS
exRangerOctober 2019 In English, the word "loch" means "lake" or "sea inlet" (the term comes form the Celtic -- Irish/Scot/Welsh -- language, not Anglo-Saxon or Latin). In the context of your question, i.e., "To be a loch to be something." it has no meaning at all -- in fact the sentence makes no sense. I advise you to re-check the source, you might have misquoted the source statement. |
SchopinouOctober 2019 I read that in this article : https://www.channelfireball.com/articles/throne-of-eldraine-limited-set-review-black/
It is about a card game. I guess what he means is that she a good card to pick. I thought the expression was an idiom, but I also know that the person writing this loves to make punts with the name of the cards (Locthwain -> Loch).