Comentarios sobrios
Buenas,:)
Como administrador de un gruppo de arte gráfica en Facebook, deseo aplicar una nueva regla de hacer respetar: Quote:
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Gracias. |
Friends (Folks), the administrator will remove all billboard-sized comments found on the side (one side or both sides?) of the (explain to us what part of Facebook you're trying to say here - 'roads' doesn't make sense to me, either).
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Where seamos sobrios is concerned, you may say let's act like grown-ups. I know the translation is not exact, but the meaning is the same, and it sound natural in American English.
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@Rusty: I think Pinosilano means road-billboard-sized posts, advertising as big as the billboards found along the roads. :D
Respecto a "seamos sobrios", yo tomaría la sugerencia de Poli: "let's act like grown-ups", o con más formalidad, "let's be sensible". :) |
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Note that 'grownup' is the noun; it's the adjective that takes a hyphen. |
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I didn't know that. Thank you! :) |
I would research the term grown-up if I were you.
Here's why: https://www.collinsdictionary.com/us...glish/grown-up |
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Over time, word spellings evolve, especially for parts of speech that are derived from phrasal verbs, like 'grow up'. You'll find the noun spelled three different ways in reliable American English dictionaries (grown-up, grown up, and grownup). The dictionary I use the most always lands on the 'grownup' entry for the noun, no matter what spelling you use as the search term. It clearly distinguishes the noun (with no hyphen) and the adjective (with a hyphen). The British English dictionary page you referenced says that the noun 'grown-up' is also spelled 'grownup'. Your reference also gives American English spellings of the noun as 'grown-up' and 'grown up'. I found another source that states that the noun is spelled as two words. All three spellings are valid, since all can be found in reliable dictionaries. The one I use all the time is 'grownup'. I also use the noun 'email', but it wasn't so long ago that it had to contain a hyphen. |
I've also found multiple renditions in multiple sources. I tend to use "grownup" for the noun, "grown-up" for the adjective, and "grown up" as the verb form.
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Check Websters. Every dictionary that I looked into advises grown-up with the exception of OED.
I recognize that this is a very small detail. |
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