Questions tagged [colloquial-language]
for questions about colloquial language. Colloquial language, colloquial dialect, or informal language is a variety of language commonly employed in conversation or other communication in informal situations.
256
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When you are using your laptop for your personal things, and someone ask you what are you doing how do you reply?
If I say I'm working on my laptop, most people think I'm working from home. While I'm doing stuff like checking emails and paying bills or preparing some documents that are not work related. How do ...
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Why is the question tag for this sentence in Cambridge Dictionary shown like this? --- He gave up his job, did he?
The following sentences are from Cambridge Dictionary along with the explanation:
In questions in informal conversation, we can leave out a subject pronoun, or a subject pronoun and an accompanying ...
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Are "All right, so ....." and "So, yeah, ....." interchangeable when we start to talk about a subject?
"So yeah,...."
"All right, so..."
I sometimes hear these two expressions being used when people start talking about something to other people. For example, I hear that some ...
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Verb followed by 3 prepositions: ".......looking out across through their eyes ...... | Is this a slip of tongue or something else?
Most people, when they think about themselves, have this experience or this very powerful phenomena that they exist inside their heads, sort of looking out across through their eyes, controlling their ...
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What does "up" mean in "Up the Terriers"?
I notice the sports writer say “Up the Terriers” for a British football team. What does "up" exactly mean?
Hull City 0-0 Huddersfield Town
Town get things going. Up the Terriers.
Twitter
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2
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Is it my ears or is it the narrator pronouncing"...JAGGED CLIFFS" something like ".... JAG IL TIFFS."?
Cornered, the seals keep close to the jagged cliffs. BBC (see:1:19-1:23)
I listened to it more than 10 times and suprised to hear the "...jagged cliffs" was pronounced something like ".....
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1
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125
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" How much before?" VS "How earlier" VS "How much earlier?"
I imagined myself talking to a doctor in English, so I made up this conversation.
A: You should take this medicine before the meals.
B: ................? (Here, I need a question that would require ...
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"Do you want there to be?" VS "Do you want there was?"
On TV, a physicist is talking about space, planets, etc. He tells about anything related to space in a very loving way. So, when it comes to whether there will be a civilization in space, the ...
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How do you say you felt the same when someone said they were delighted: Do you say " "So, did I" OR "So was I."?
This is from a tv show Golden Ladies (see:13:21-13:25) The ladies are talking about their new neighbours(the McDowells) who were there and have just left.
Blanch: Well, I think the McDowells were ...
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The idiomatic antonyms of "keep someone in the loop"?
In this thread I realized that 'loop someone in' does not fit in the scenario of inviting someone into a WhatsApp group for an intermittent discussion, and the idiomatic expression should be 'keep ...
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Is it all right to say "one one hundred" when you actually mean to say "one percent"?
This is from BBC about space and planets Space questions (see:27:05-27:40)
The presenter says;
"Its atmosphere is one one hundred the pressure of Earth." which doesn't make sense.
However, ...
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Asking about future life or job
To ask a child or a teen about their future job, should one ask: "What would you like to be later?" or "What would you like to do later?"
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"We have been down this street already." OR ""We have been to this street already."
This is from a British film Anybod's nightmare see:46:33-46:35
Two people in a car are looking for a place by looking at a map while driving. They can't agree on whether they are on the right street, ...
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How to express "stupid/fool/dumb brother" in a friendly way? [closed]
I vaguely remember in the past I heard a father said with a smile, "My stupid boy/son, it is a cat, not a dog." In this context, the father was not scolding his son. It's spoken in a ...
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Is this grammatically incorrect to say "honestly, I feel like a child myself sometimes"?
Is it grammatically incorrect to say:
honestly, I feel like a child myself sometimes
Is the rule "never use myself with feel" relevant here?
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1
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"That's graduation sorted". What type of grammar is used here?
That's graduation sorted.
Context: Speakers talk about the way they want to organise their graduation ceremony and finally find the perfect solution for that.
Even though I get the gist, I don't ...
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What does "you better" mean in this context of conversation?
The following is a excerpt from an interview script on Linux Journal:
Guid: ... If you talk to people, they all think Windows stinks and UNIX is the one true operating system.
Phil: I think that too!...
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How do I Americanize "Fat lot of good X will do you"?
I learned British English, but I work exclusively with Americans. I'll often say "Fat lot of good X did for us", and I get confused looks from others. For example, the other day, I said &...
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Can we "go to a movie"? Is it grammatical?
Please tell me, can I say "I go to a movie (I mean a film)"? Because we go to a place not to a film. I saw this sentence in "Tactics for listening":
I went to a really dumb movie.
...
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If someone says "That hair tho", does it have a positive or a negative meaning?
I've seen this many times on social media and I can't decide whether it has good or bad meaning.
Here is an example from twitter of a picture of a person with the statement saying
BREAKING: CANTOR ...
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Meaning of “on the low side”
I was talking to a recruiter and she said that “ your maths skill is a bit on the low side”. Did she mean that my maths is very low in the score distribution of all candidates (i’m thinking about the ...
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Is it correct to answer the question “who is there?” by “I”?
Somebody on quora stated that “I.” is a possible answer to the question “Who is there?”, making “I.” the shortest English sentence whatsoever.
I'm not a native speaker but wouldn't the natural answer ...
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They Was Gonna - Colloquial Language
I heard some people saying "They was..." instead of "They were...".
Also, it seems that this is usually used with gonna (e.g. They was gonna use it).
Is this a common colloquial ...
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which of "the pizza wasn't quite up there with the rest" or "the pizza left something to be desired" more natural to say? [closed]
The chicken and pasta were delicious. They were excellent.
However, the ______________.
(a) the pizza wasn't quite up there with the rest
(b) the pizza wasn't quite on par with the rest
(c) the pizza ...
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'Unhide' Is Commonly Used, Why Doesn't It Appear on Any Vocabulary?
I noticed that the word 'unhide' it's widely used, though a quick research on multiple vocabularies didn't bring anything relevant up.
This word is extremely common in IT when talking about files, for ...
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Is it natural to say "exchange contacts"?
Example:
She wanted to exchange contacts with him. (e.g. email, instant
messaging, phone number.)
Is it natural to use this phrase? As a short way of saying: "exchange contact information?"...
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Stepped into the kitchenette [closed]
Can you use into (rather than to) when talking about a kitchenette—even though a kitchenette isn't a place that you enter?
Note: Google Ngrams says that "stepped into the kitchenette" is way ...
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Stepped out onto the balcony
"Stepped out onto the balcony" is more common than "stepped out to/into the balcony."
Why is "onto" used even though, usually, the floor of a balcony isn't higher than ...
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Why is "that" more suitable in the following?
"If I lie to you, I'll lose your trust forever. That's/it's the last thing I want."
"I'll search for Mary. That/it was my original plan anyway."
I know "that" is more ...
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isn't going anywhere vs. [pronoun]'s not going anywhere
he's not going anywhere has 49,600 results.
he isn't going anywhere has 5,650 results.
(I performed a similar search in a private library, and the difference was more or less the same.)
Is the second ...
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"Drinking coffee," "haven't had coffee," etc
"Drinking coffee" is more common than "having coffee" on Google Books.
"Haven't had coffee" is way more common than "haven't drunk coffee."
"He'd had food&...
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Live in a state/situation/circumstance
Do you think we can say someone is living in a situation/state/circumstance? If things are going bad in our life and we have bad life circumstances etc, can we say any of these sentences?
I live in a ...
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IWhat is the meaning of the beat in this paragraph?
I have been reading an essay about Joan Didion from New Yorker (https://www.newyorker.com/culture/postscript/joan-didion-and-the-voice-of-america)
I would like to ask multiple questions in this essay. ...
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"to do good with change""
She doesn’t do good with change, so we try to keep the routine in the house to avoid boosting her anxiety.
It seems that “do good” is a synonym for “adapt/bear/accept” and the like. Can anyone ...
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cheer up / buck up / perk up /. Which makes more sense in the given context?
Not only did I not get tired, I rather cheered up/perked up/bucked up.
Not only did I not tire, rather I was/felt invigorated.
Do any of these seem natural to you?
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TA (Abbreviation, AmE) [closed]
Context: in a book, two college girls are talking about their lives in a quite colloquial, friendly tone. One of them says: "I made out with my girl TA last week". Does anyone know what &...
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Overtake, cut off usage
I have two questions:
Relating to the usage of the word 'overtake'. Is this word common in colloquial English? If I say 'I overtook the truck in front of me', does this sound unnatural or very formal ...
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Why is "struggled to process" more common than "struggled processing"?
In many cases, you'd write verb + gerund:
His eyes stopped to sting/stinging after a while.
Google Ngrams
What is it an exception with the verbs struggle and process?
He struggled to process/...
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Is the following "what's" contraction similar to these other cases?
What's he doing?
Is this "what's" contraction the same as:
What's his last name?
What's the last time he showered?
Why or why not?
I ask because the first sentence sounds a little ...
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2
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"Go back being friends" vs "go back to being friends."
Google Ngrams says that go back to being friends is a lot more common than go back being friends.
Is the reason grammatical? Or there's another reason? (Or maybe they are equally correct?)
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How do I respond when someone asks, “How do you feel about {food name - pizza, bowl of…} etc.”?
Question is specific to office environment. Is answering "I feel awesome" or "I would love to have that" good enough?
Also, how to respond if you are not down for it or prefer ...
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"How about you start tomorrow?"
Does this a common phrase? Or at least does it sound natural?
I know this is quite common:
"Okay, you have the job. How about starting tomorrow?"
But I'm not sure about this:
"Okay, ...
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Can I say "Whatever You Did Do?"
I am writing a song about forgiveness and "It does not matter what you did do" perfectly fits into the rhyme scheme while "It doesn't matter what you did" does not.
How awkward ...
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Which of the two sentences is grammatically correct on sounds natural?
I've been remembering this picture for as long I've been remembering
myself.
I've been remembering this picture since I've been remembering
myself.
Which sentence is right? I think they have the same ...
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1
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“How do you not…”
How do you not doomscroll without turning a blind eye to the injustices happening around the world.
Is the “how do you not” construction awkward/unnatural in a colloquial context?
Also, does the ...
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A little [noun/adjective] vs. a bit [noun/adjective]
I'm not sure if I'm correct, but I think "bit" is used more in informal speech. I think to avoid this kind of confusion?
He is a bit cuckoo. (Crazy.)
He is a little cuckoo. (Bird.)
Or ...
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Natural ways to mean someone is stalling another
Example: If a woman is asked to get married and tries to get time to answer because she feels insecure but doesn't want to say it. I could tell she's stalling the man. But if I wanted to sound more ...
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What is the opposite of "a soft spot"?
If one can have a soft spot for cherished things, one can have a ________ for dreaded ones.
I've thought about words like "imperviousness" or "immunity", but they sound more formal ...
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Meaning of "having a high game" [closed]
I know that there is an idiom "being at the top of their game".
I wanted to know if this sentence makes any sense-Everybody here has a high emoji game. It's referring to people on a certain ...
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Is "there" often omitted in colloquial speech?
I am reading Post Office by Charles Bukowski. The writing style of the book is quite conversational and colloquial.
This sentence came up in the book.
I think he wanted to use the word “hygienics” ...