Question
Updated on
28 Nov 2020
- Korean
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English (US)
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Japanese
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Simplified Chinese (China)
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Question about English (US)
I saw the conversation below.
A: It's too late.
B: Says who?
A: Uh, says my watch.
I thought "who says?", "my watch says" are natural than "says who?", "says my watch", but they used the verb first.
What is the natural expression? What is the difference between them?
I saw the conversation below.
A: It's too late.
B: Says who?
A: Uh, says my watch.
I thought "who says?", "my watch says" are natural than "says who?", "says my watch", but they used the verb first.
What is the natural expression? What is the difference between them?
A: It's too late.
B: Says who?
A: Uh, says my watch.
I thought "who says?", "my watch says" are natural than "says who?", "says my watch", but they used the verb first.
What is the natural expression? What is the difference between them?
Answers
28 Nov 2020
Featured answer
- English (US)
Hmm... it probably has to do with how dialogue is written in English stories. English books are full of sentences like this:
"What do you mean?" said Robert.
If it helps, think of "says who?" as a set phrase.
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- English (US)
Hmm... it probably has to do with how dialogue is written in English stories. English books are full of sentences like this:
"What do you mean?" said Robert.
If it helps, think of "says who?" as a set phrase.
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- Korean
Thank you! Can I use "who says?" instead of "says who?"
- English (US)
yes you are right, but this is casual English and the speaker is trying to be very informal by breaking a rule of garammer. A native speaker will say things like "How you" when they know it is really "how are you" . The more comfortable you get in a language the more you can cleverly disregard the rules.
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- English (US)
@alloe I don't think so, but "who says that?" could work.
"Says who?" sounds better, though.
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- Korean
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