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"Food, Clothing and housing" or "Food, Clothes and Shelter"?
I wanted to translate a Japanese word "衣食住" which is literally translated as "clothes, food, housing".
I came across quite a few translations:
- food, clothing and housing
- food, clothing and shelter
- food, clothing and sheltering
- food, shelter and clothing
- food, clothes and shelter
...etc.
I looked up on the Internet to see which is the most commonly used one, and it seems like it is "food, shelter and clothing".
I know they all mean the same thing, but is there one that is always used in an official document or do they all sound appropriate?
Apr 30, 2014 12:15 AM
Answers · 2
1
Food, clothing and shelter is the most common. "Housing" is a more specific term, but "shelter" is more broad to describe a safe place to stay and more than likely live in. If you are referring to the basic needs in life, then you would say shelter over housing.
April 30, 2014
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HCast
Language Skills
English, Japanese
Learning Language
English
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