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Liton Das Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

Go hard.

As a teacher to student


I might go "lenient" on you this time for your negligible mistake.


But next time, I will go "hard" with you if don't change yourself.



So "lenient" means to treat someone fairly but in an opposite way, can I use "hard" as mentioned above?

  

Top answer

Liton Das I might go "lenient" on you this time for your negligible mistake. That is not natural. " That "might" seems wrong.

  • Liton Das I might go "lenient" on you this time for your negligible mistake.
  • That is not natural.
  • " That "might" seems wrong.
  • Make up your mind before you open your mouth, unless you intend to go on to extort something from him.
  • Also, if the mistake is negligible, why are we even having this conversation?
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1 Answers
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Liton DasI might go "lenient" on you this time for your negligible mistake.

That is not natural. I would expect "I might be lenient with you this time for your negligible mistake." With "go … on", it becomes the more informal "I might go easy on you this time for your negligible mistake." That "might" seems wrong. Make up your mind before you open your mout

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