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Veronica
Hello everybody! I’m reading a story and I find a new word: “kinda”. Someone can explains me what it means? I give you the 2 examples that I find in my book 👇🏻 1. …and it really KINDA represents the of London 2. …and you have a people KINDA out on the streets setting up stalls… Thanks 💚
Jan 25, 2022 8:11 PM
Answers · 4
2
"Kinda" is how it sounds when people say "kind of" fast. We tend to drop the "f" sound in the word "of" so it ends up just sounding like "kind'a". It's heard in conversational, colloquial English, but is normally written in novels when there is dialogue or in text-speak on social media as it is of course, not proper.
January 25, 2022
2
This content violates our Community Guidelines.
January 25, 2022
1
Kinda= kind of
January 25, 2022
1
KINDA means "kind of".
January 25, 2022
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