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Kasanoff Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

Difference between "stock of angry" and "angry"

Hi,

I am new so nice to meet you Emotion: wink

Well I have problem. When can I say for example "Why are you stock of angry" and when "Why are you angry"? Is that the same questions?

Regards,
kasanoff
  

Top answer

Why are you angry? is fine. Why are you stock of angry?

  • Why are you angry?
  • is fine.
  • Why are you stock of angry?
  • doesn't make any sense, so don't say it!
  • Where did you get this from?
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4 Answers
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Why are you angry? is fine.

Why are you stock of angry? doesn't make any sense, so don't say it!Emotion: smile Where did you get this fro
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Sorry, my mistake, it wasn't "stock of angry" but "sort of angry". So what do you think?

kasanoff
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Nona The Brit
Why are you angry? is fine.

Why are you stock of angry? doesn't make any sense, so don't say it!
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"sort of angry"
is casual/informal
and it doesn't mean quite "angry," but "kind of angry, apparently angry," thus less firm and definite.

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