Trouvez des professeurs en Anglais
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what does the “swell” mean ?
Usually after they had walked awhile she would park Bubber and Ralph in some shady place. Bubber was a swell kid and she had trained him pretty good.
17 mars 2017 01:48
Réponses · 2
1
"Swell" is an outdated slang or colloquial word that means "really good." It was already dying out in the 1950s. However, one of the stock greetings people would write in each others' high school yearbooks was "Best of luck to a swell kid." When applied to a person, I think the closest word today would be "amazing." "Swell kid" means "amazing kid" or "nice kid" or "good kid."
"Swell" just means all-round good, not sophisticated or cool. You could compliment parents by saying "You must have raised him right, he's a swell kid."
"Swell" was considered to be nonstandard English and teachers didn't like it. An old joke of the period:
Teacher: "There are two words I never want to hear in this classroom. One is 'swell' and the other is 'lousy.'"
Student: "OK, what are the two words?"
17 mars 2017
I'd like to add another candidate. "Terrific." It means "causing terror". Eg.: "I was in the middle of a terrific storm at sea and my boat capsized." The 1920's slang meaning is "wonderful". "That meal in the restaurant was terrific." It is ridiculous and people have lost sight of its true meaning, but they still use it today. But this is not without precedent. If you tell someone that his shoes are "bad", he might shop for a better pair. But if you say that they are "baaaad!", he will think that he has the most stylish and enviable shoes available. It is all very silly and based on shallow thinking and immaturity.
17 mars 2017
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Compétences linguistiques
Chinois (mandarin), Anglais
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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