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Madhulk Posted 18 years ago
Vocabulary

A tricky question...

When you say someone "You do your job, you do your best" do you mean one usually does his job right or you mean something like "Keep up the good work"?
  

Top answer

It could be advice that you give to someone: Whatever your job is, give it your best effort. But it could also be praise and thanks: We know that you give us the best you have to offer. It's hard to say without knowing more about the context, the relationship between the person saying it and the person it's being said to, and the tone of voice.

  • It could be advice that you give to someone: Whatever your job is, give it your best effort.
  • But it could also be praise and thanks: We know that you give us the best you have to offer.
  • It's hard to say without knowing more about the context, the relationship between the person saying it and the person it's being said to, and the tone of voice.
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1 Answers
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It could be advice that you give to someone: Whatever your job is, give it your best effort. But it could also be praise and thanks: We know that you give us the best you have to offer.

It's hard to say without knowing more about the context, the relationship between the person saying it and the person it's being said to, and the tone of voice.

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