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Englishsz Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

fair cheating

Translations.com charges a pretty high fee for its services(from 12 to 40 per word), so you might make this one your last resort. But no fair cheating on that Spanish final.


What's 'fair cheating'?
  

Top answer

Hi, Englishsz. " It's mostly an expression children would use ("Hey, no fair! ") or adults would use in very casual conversation.

  • Hi, Englishsz.
  • " It's mostly an expression children would use ("Hey, no fair!
  • ") or adults would use in very casual conversation.
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1 Answers
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Hi, Englishsz. The idiom you want is not "fair cheating;" it's "no fair."

"No fair" is a very informal, colloquial way of saying "it's not fair" -- so the sentence means "It's not fair to cheat on that Spanish final (exam)" or "Cheating on the Spanish final is not fair."

It's mostly an expression children would use ("Hey, no fair! He got a bigger piece of cake!") or adults woul

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