Andrés
As an old local saying goes? Is it usual to place "goes" instead "says" in this sentence? ________ Thanks!
23 de jun. de 2019 17:13
Respuestas · 10
1
In US English, "as an old local saying goes..." is fine. There is a possible stylistic problem with "As an old local saying says..." The repetition in "saying says" seems awkward to me. You could say "As an old local proverb says..." There might be a slight difference in meaning between "goes" and "says." "Says" suggests an accurate repetition, of the exact words, of a saying whose words never change. "Goes" suggests that the saying varies a bit, and that you are giving the gist of it but not necessarily giving it exactly. For example: "A famous quotation from Shakespeare says 'What's in a name? That which we call a rose By any other name would smell as sweet." "As the saying goes, a rose smells just as sweet no matter what we call it."
23 de junio de 2019
1
No, the expression is ‘as the saying goes’.
23 de junio de 2019
1
Yes, "As the old says goes". British English. Cannot comment for the Americans.
23 de junio de 2019
As the saying goes "nothing ventered, nothing gained".
24 de junio de 2019
Thanks Luis
23 de junio de 2019
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