Yuan
Hello, hope you all are doing well. Came across a sentence “singles are looking for emotionally mature partner. The so called bad boys and bad girls are out, emotional maturity is in”. I can roughly understand the meaning of that, but still haven’t got the usage of “… be out, … be in”. Does it mean the latter is replacing the former?
6. Juni 2024 05:18
Antworten · 8
3
'out' and 'in', here, refer to fashion. Things are in fashion or out of fashion but you don't need 'fashion' if it's clear from the context. Boot-cut jeans are out. Skinny jeans are in. So in a sense it means one has replaced the other, but it's in terms of what the current fashion or trend is.
6. Juni 2024
1
‘To be in’ and ‘to be out’ are informal ways of indicating whether something is trendy or popular. Note that in written English, you don’t omit the personal pronoun. I hope you are doing well. I came across the sentence …
6. Juni 2024
1
You have the general idea :). Bad boys and bad girls are usually synonymous with young people who pursue momentary pleasure and tend to lack maturity. The emotionally mature partner is the opposite-- a bit older, calmer, more mature. To be out or in is similar to the idea of 风行一时 - some things are popular for a while and then their popularity fades. Hope this helps :)
6. Juni 2024
"out" abd "in" mean "exclude" and "include" here
6. Juni 2024
Haben Sie noch keine Antworten gefunden?
Geben Sie Ihre Fragen ein und lassen Sie sich von Muttersprachlern helfen!