Jay
It's a characteristic about me. In a movie, the main character drinks quite a lot, and another character tries to stop her drinking more, then the main character says, "It's okay. I can drink. It's a thing about me." What does "a thing" mean here? As I wrote in the title, does it mean "a characteristic" and is it common to say that?
22 de ago. de 2020 14:45
Respuestas · 6
'Thing' can be used to mean an object, animal, quality, event, situation, etc. https://learnersdictionary.com/definition/thing In this case, 'thing' refers to the quality or aspect of his/her character.
22 de agosto de 2020
Thank you very much.
23 de agosto de 2020
Yes, you are correct. From the context of the conversation, the main character is being a bit flippant (maybe even snarky). As Michael said, the line could have been "I'm like that" or even "It's kinda my thing." would fit well within the context. (By the way, "kinda" is obviously not technically a word. However, it is used colloquially quite a bit and fits her demeanor. You would only use it in very informal situations.)
22 de agosto de 2020
in addition to Michael's options, "It's a characteristic of mine" or "it's one of my characteristics". But Michael's "I'm like that" is easier and more natural.
22 de agosto de 2020
Yes it does mean a characteristic in this case, and yes its use in this way is quite modern but is now widespread. "Thing" is a word with many uses :) Still, you wouldn't really use a "characteristic about me." You might say "I'm like that."
22 de agosto de 2020
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