sonia 索尼娅
when you say, she was " fed up of" what are you saying?? thanks everybody
25. Juni 2010 22:43
Antworten · 7
2
Food analogy! If you "eat" too much, you get full... then sick. So to be "fed up(with/from/of something)" is another way of saying you've definitely had enough of a situation. Enough to make you angry, tired, upset, impatient...
26. Juni 2010
1
I think in standard US English you have to say "fed up with". I've never heard of "fed up of" but that might be fine in other forms of English. It means that you cannot take anymore of the bad situation. You had patience in the past, but now you can't continue. "I'm fed up with the noise the neighbors' children make. I'm going next door to talk to the parents." "He got fed up with being overweight and started an excellent diet and exercise program." "When you become fed up with your boyfriend/girlfriend, you need to leave him/her or else you'll be unhappy."
26. Juni 2010
1
To be fed up means to have had enough, to have reached the extent of one's patience, usually in a frustrated sense. E.g., "I'm fed up with this job!" = "I've had enough of this job [and am possibly at the point of quitting]!" "She's fed up with her boyfriend" = "She's had enough of her boyfriend [and is possibly dumping him or considering it]."
26. Juni 2010
Hi BRSwartz, I had to check that also! Seems that "fed up of" is particularly British? My first choice is also to say "fed up with". Still, "I'm fed up of going to work in the rain" (for example) makes grammatical sense. As does "fed up with". :)
27. Juni 2010
Tired of Something
26. Juni 2010
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