"What is You look at what people said?" is like asking someone to read a story and tell you what they think it means.
Imagine you're playing with your toys, and you tell your friend a fun story about your dinosaur winning a race. Then your friend says, "I think the dinosaur was really fast." That’s what people said, and you look at what people said is like thinking about what your friend just told you, you’re trying to understand it better.
How It Works
When someone asks "You look at what people said?", they're asking others to pay attention to the ideas or words that came from other people.
- Like when you draw a picture and show it to your class, and everyone says different things about it.
- Then your teacher might ask, "What do you think the drawing means?", that’s like you look at what people said.
It's just taking someone else's thoughts or words and thinking about them, like when you're playing a game of guess who, and you use clues from other players to figure out who it is.
Examples
- A child sees a rainbow as magical, while an adult might see it as just light bending.
- Two friends have completely different takes on the same movie.
- One person thinks coffee is essential, another can't stand its bitterness.
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See also
- How Does A Better Approach To PERSPECTIVE (No GRID!) Work?
- How Do Religious Texts Work?: Crash Course Religions #14?
- How Does Illusion of Space in Artworks Work?
- How Does The Historical Narrative Work?
- How Does Scary Dream Meanings You Should Never Ignore Work?