ابحث بين معلمي الإنجليزية المتعددين...
Paula
Fair-skin or fair-skinned ?
١٥ يونيو ٢٠١٤ ١٤:٠٦
الإجابات · 2
1
Hi Camila,
Drew has the right idea.
'Fair' is an adjective. 'Skin' is a noun. So you would say:
* She has fair skin.
Note that there is no hyphen " - " used here. They are two separate words.
You can also combine these two words to make a compound adjective:
* She is fair-skinned.
* Fair-skinned people need to take care when they go out in the sun
It is very common to make compound adjectives in this way. You take the adjective ('fair') , add a hyphen ( - ), then turn the noun ('skin') into a verb in the past participle form ( 'skinned' ).
Other examples are blue-eyed, short-haired, long-legged.
Why don't you try constructing a few words like this yourself?
١٥ يونيو ٢٠١٤
1
Maybe someone else knows better, but I believe you say fair-skinned when you describe *someone* and fair-skin when you describe someone's skin. For example:
"You are fair-skinned"
"You have fair skin"
Also I'm not sure if it's fair-skin or fair skin, not that it matters too much. Someone correct me if I'm wrong.
١٥ يونيو ٢٠١٤
لم تجد إجاباتك بعد؟
اكتب اسألتك ودع الناطقين الأصليين باللغات يساعدونك!
Paula
المهارات اللغوية
الصينية (المندرية), الإنجليزية, الفرنسية, الألمانية, الإيطالية, البرتغالية, الإسبانية
لغة التعلّم
الإنجليزية, الإيطالية
مقالات قد تعجبك أيضًا

English Vocabulary for Using Microsoft Office at Work
11 تأييدات · 3 التعليقات

How to Answer “How Was Your Weekend?” Naturally in English
50 تأييدات · 29 التعليقات

Why Some Jokes Don’t Translate: Understanding Humor in English
15 تأييدات · 6 التعليقات
مقالات أكثر
