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Eipjoo Posted 13 years ago
Vocabulary

Do the ‘down’s have the meaning of ‘toward’?

His suggestion did not go down very well.
The speech went down a treat with members

Do the ‘down’s have the meaning of ‘toward’?
  

Top answer

eipjoo His suggestion did not go down very well. = His suggestion was not well received. The people didn't like it.

  • eipjoo His suggestion did not go down very well.
  • = His suggestion was not well received.
  • The people didn't like it.
  • The speech went down a treat with members .
  • The only thing close is 'His speech was a treat for the members.
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2 Answers
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eipjooHis suggestion did not go down very well. = His suggestion was not well received. The people didn't like it.
The speech went down a treat with members.
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eipjooDo the ‘down’s have the meaning of ‘toward’?
No. They are both part of a larger idiom.

to go down well - to be accepted with enthusiasm
to go down a treat with - to be considered a treat by; to be enjoyable to

The second idiom is chiefly British. It isn't used in North America at all as far as I know.

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