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Chloe
What does 'go limp' mean, except for its literal meaning?❤
Jun 15, 2019 2:57 AM
Answers · 7
1
Greg has given a couple of good answers, but I think they are only used in some regions. In the US, the phrase "to go limp" is never used to mean "to lose interest." The only metaphorical meaning I'm familiar with is sexual (referring to a man "going limp").
June 15, 2019
1
The most common non-literal meaning is 'lose interest'. To go limp on something is to lost interest on something. You had a lot of interest or motivation, then suddenly you lose all this interest to continue - you go limp on it.
Always there's the idea you previously had a strong interest on doing something. But that interest suddenly sags, goes limp and you're left with no enthusiasm for continuing.
"I really wanted to go overseas last year, but I went limp on the idea and gave it up"
June 15, 2019
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Chloe
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, Korean
Learning Language
English, Korean
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