Busca entre varios profesores de Inglés...
Andrei
Meaning of a Sentence
I'm confused with the word "worth" in this sentence: "But I don't trust you worth a damn". Is the word "worth" a noun or an adjective hete? It rather looks like a verb in this case as there are no auxiliary verb before "worth". Could you clarify a meaning of the sentence and the reason the word has been used here this way?
Thanks in advance.
1 de sep. de 2017 5:09
Respuestas · 3
1
So that sentence isn't grammatically correct, but it is how some people would speak in a real life casual conversation. It's a shortened version of "I don't trust that you are worth a damn." If someone is not "worth a damn" it means that they are worthless, useless, not worth anything.
1 de septiembre de 2017
1
Daniel is spot on. Yeah, it means you are worthless, but the sentence doesn't look grammatically correct.
1 de septiembre de 2017
¿No has encontrado las respuestas?
¡Escribe tus preguntas y deja que los hablantes nativos te ayuden!
Andrei
Competencias lingüísticas
Inglés, Ruso
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés
Artículos que podrían gustarte

Santa, St. Nicholas, or Father Christmas? How Christmas Varies Across English-Speaking Countries
10 votos positivos · 4 Comentarios

Reflecting on Your Progress: Year-End Language Journal Prompts
9 votos positivos · 3 Comentarios

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
25 votos positivos · 19 Comentarios
Más artículos
