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Pen slide 883 Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Die down or Let up

Hi~ Teachers~

I came across these two expressions and I am wondering how different they are.

Here are some examples.

"When the rain lets up we'll go for a walk."

"The wind died down during the night."


So I'd like to know if they can be used interchangeable. (Not only for weather but also other situations...)


Thanks a lot in advance.

  

Top answer

They are similar enough that they may sometimes be used interchangeably. When the rain [lets up / dies down] we'll go for a walk. The wind [let up / died down] during the night.

  • They are similar enough that they may sometimes be used interchangeably.
  • When the rain [lets up / dies down] we'll go for a walk.
  • The wind [let up / died down] during the night.
  • In some contexts they are not interchangeable.
  • If you want to accelerate, don't let up on the gas.
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1 Answers
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They are similar enough that they may sometimes be used interchangeably.

When the rain [lets up / dies down] we'll go for a walk.
The wind [let up / died down] during the night.

In some contexts they are not interchangeable.

If you want to accelerate, don't let up on the gas. (Not don't die down on the gas.)

CJ

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