Daniel Ojeda
Can someone explain "A big deal" vs "(a) big of a deal" to me please? I will be very grateful.
29. Aug. 2022 14:42
Antworten · 6
3
"Big" isn't a noun, so you can't have "a big of a deal." It makes no sense.
29. August 2022
Eingeladener
1
Hi Daniel! Normally, we can say "a big deal" but we can't say "(a) big of a deal" since it wouldn't be correct. So, for example, "it was a big deal" is correct, but "it was a big of a deal" would be wrong. There is, however, one situation I can think of where you may hear the second one and I've heard it quite a lot. Let me give you an example: A: I can't stop panicking about yesterday's test! What if I did really badly? B: Oh, don't worry about it. It's not that big of a deal. Here, instead of "it's not that big of a deal", B could have said "it's not a big deal", which has more or less the same meaning. B is just saying "it's not a big problem, it's not worth worrying about". I wonder if this is what you were thinking of? I hope this was helpful! :)
29. August 2022
Perhaps for your second option you meant “a bit of a big deal.”
29. August 2022
Hello You need to use this variant "a big deal" as the second one does not exist in English.
29. August 2022
Haben Sie noch keine Antworten gefunden?
Geben Sie Ihre Fragen ein und lassen Sie sich von Muttersprachlern helfen!