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Hilda
An equivalence of flip-flopper in British English?
Is there an equivalence of flip-flopper in British English or is it used in British English? Thank you
Here are some explanations and examples I've found online :
a person, especially a politician, who suddenly changes his or her opinion or policy
E.g. Voters may not worry about consistency and may actually prefer a flip-flopper.
someone who goes back and fourth. like one day he/she is someones friend and the next day shes not.
E.g. Karen is such a flip flopper. yesterday she said she hates chelsea, and now they are at each others house!
Nov 20, 2018 4:32 AM
Answers · 3
2
"Is there an equivalence of flip-flopper in British English or is it used in British English?".
Are you referring to just in the UK ?
I can speak a little for Australia :) Here you tend to use it more as a verb than a noun. For instance, rather than say someone is a flip-flopper you would more likely say "they flipflop" on a certain position. The conversation gives the context in what they always reverse their opinion on. Otherwise you add a few more words.
I do hear it on occasion as a noun, but less and usually this is in a political context "He/she is a flip-flopper !", meaning they (politician) change their political opinion on a certain subject quite often.
November 20, 2018
May be "inconstant".
November 20, 2018
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Hilda
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), Chinese (Cantonese), English, Filipino (Tagalog)
Learning Language
English, Filipino (Tagalog)
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