Everyday Grammar TV: Connotations

VOA Learning English
VOA Learning English
36.3 هزار بار بازدید - 2 سال پیش - John: Hi Faith! You won't
John: Hi Faith! You won't believe what I found this week! Faith: Hey, John! What's that? John: I went to an antique store and found a vintage 1940's style suit! Faith: Ugh, John! Don't you mean old? Isn't an antique store where there's a bunch of old, decrepit things? John: No! why would you say it like that? These are vintage or antique things - good quality stuff, just older. Faith: So, wait! What is the difference between antique, vintage, old, and decrepit? John: Ah! That's a good question for a lesson! All of these words mean "old," but their connotations are different. Faith: Oh! I know what connotations are! Connotations are associations of words. It's the feeling we get from the word: if the word is positive or negative, or somewhere in the middle, or if the word is stronger or weaker. Sometimes connotations are emotional or cultural. So, when I said that antique stores were old and decrepit, that was negative, right? John: Right! You offended me just a little bit. Old can be negative sometimes, but most times it's a neutral word, in the middle, not positive, nor negative. But when you called it decrepit. That word was negative! Faith: I apologize. Can we think of some other examples? Oh! Was the suit inexpensive or not costly? John: Do you mean, "Was it cheap?" Faith: Well, yes. I was trying to say it with more of a positive connotation. You know, because cheap sounds negative, right? John: You're right! Cheap, affordable, and inexpensive all mean the same thing, but cheap sounds more negative. And you're also right about the suit. It was cheap. And that's Everyday Grammar! Originally published at - learningenglish.voanews.com/a/6907867.html
2 سال پیش در تاریخ 1401/10/16 منتشر شده است.
36,313 بـار بازدید شده
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