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What does "like like" mean? In "I don't think you're a bad person, I just don't like* like you."
28 févr. 2017 22:54
Réponses · 3
6
In English, you can say someone is interested romantically, or sexually, in someone else by saying that they "like them", e.g. "John likes Amanda". The same example also can mean that John likes Amanda in general, as a person, not a potential partner. To express the difference, sometimes people say "like-like" to make it clear that they mean the romantic sense, not the general sense. So, someone who turns down your romantic advances can say, "I like you, but I don't really like-like you" (they can see you have good qualities as a person, but they don't feel any romantic or sexual attraction in you). In general the "word-word" repetition is used to differentiate levels of intensity withing a single word. A famous case of this is the controversy regarding Whoopi Goldberg using it to defend Roman Polanski: https://jezebel.com/5369395/whoopi-on-roman-polanski-it-wasnt-rape-rape
28 février 2017
1
Berze makes a good point about the doubling up of words to add emphasis. The first 'like' emphasises what "kind" of 'like' you mean by the second one. In other words, 'like like' - said with the appropriate stress on the first word - means 'really like' (as in 'fancy') rather than just an ordinary kind of 'like' (as in the way you might feel about your next-door neighbour or a pleasant colleague). In a similar spoken context, you might differentiate between going on an ordinary 'date' and going on a 'DATE date', which is more serious. You can imagine the speaker raising their eyebrows meaningfully as they say the first word. Here's another example. Some time ago, here on italki, Dan Smith mentioned talking to his wife about taking out the 'trash trash'. The doubling up emphasised the nature of the said trash - it wasn't the kind of trash that was for recycling (as in paper and bottles), but real trash that actually needed to be thrown away.
1 mars 2017
The same as I explained in your last question: like like = really like
28 février 2017
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