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Angliholic Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

a frowning look//a long face

0It's better to have a sense of humor than to have a frowning look all day long.02br
02br
00Hi,02br
02br
00Does "a frowning look" sound idiomatic to you? Is it equivalent to "a long face?" Thanks.0-
  

Top answer

02br 00A "long face" does not necessarily indicate that you are frowning [drawing your eyebrows together]. 0-

  • 02br 00A "long face" does not necessarily indicate that you are frowning [drawing your eyebrows together].
  • 0-
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5 Answers
0
0 No.02br
00A "long face" does not necessarily indicate that you are frowning [drawing your eyebrows together]. 0-
0
1blockquote
01cite10Feebs1112cite10 11b10No. 12b12br
12br
10A "long face" does not necessarily indicate that you are frowning [drawing your eyebrows together]. 12br
12br
12blockquote
10Thanks, Feebs.02br
02br
00If "a frowning look" doesn't sound idiomatic, then
0
0Hi,02br
02br
01font00It's better to have a sense of humor than to have a frowning look all day long.02font02br
01font00How about this?02font01font02br
02br
00It's better to have a sense of humor than to have a frown all day long.02br
0
0
1blockquote
01cite10Clive12cite12br
10Hi,12br
12br
11font10It's better to have a sense of humor than to have a frowning look all day long.12font12br
11font10How about this?12font11font12br
12br
10It
0
0Hi,02br
02br
01font00"To have a frown" sounds excellent to me, but does it mean "to have frowning face?"02font02br
02br
00Seems the same to me.02br
02br
00Clive0-

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