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Sophie Liu
Hate & Don't like
The word "hate" is different from "don't like", could you please tell me how big the difference is between the two kind of expression?
To what extent will people use "hate"?
"She doesn't like cats."Does it mean that "She doesn't hate cats,either."?
Sep 24, 2010 6:56 AM
Answers · 4
1
"Hate" is a definite word, so the meaning is very clear and strong.
"Don't like" is simply the negative of "like". It's not necessarily hate as such - it's a softer version, and still tied to "like". It could equally mean you don't care about it. However you feel about it, it's not "like". Far less committed than "hate".
Another example is the reply to "how are you?" If you reply "good", then that's pretty clear. If you reply "not bad" it's not automatically good, but a less-committed positive answer. You may be OK, good, great, so-so but definitely not "bad".
In Orwell's novel "1984", the words "bad" and "evil" didn't exist in Newspeak - everything was described in relation to "good": good, plusgood, doubleplusgood vs. ungood, plusungood, doubleplusungood. So evil didn't have its own existence, it was simply described as something in relation to "good". Nasty piece of brainwashing, huh? :)
September 24, 2010
A, I don't like snake, but I don't hate it;
B, I hate my father , because he abandoned me when I was a little girl。The hate doesn't root in dislike, but because he broke my heart.
C, Sometimes hate comes from dislike~
September 24, 2010
hate is much stronger than 'don't like'.
September 24, 2010
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Sophie Liu
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, French, Icelandic
Learning Language
French, Icelandic
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