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Old 10-Feb-2008, 14:56
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Default separate the good from the bad

I am trying to translate what directly from norwegian to english will be "separate the shit from the cinnamon", in the meaning of separating the good from the bad. Is there a common english frase for what I am trying to say?
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Old 10-Feb-2008, 15:04
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Default Re: separate the good from the bad

Simply 'separate the good from the bad' is perfectly good. You could use: separate the wheat from the chaff, if you want to appear to be, say, erudite.
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Old 10-Feb-2008, 15:12
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Default Re: separate the good from the bad

Thanks!
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Old 10-Feb-2008, 15:33
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Default Re: separate the good from the bad

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Originally Posted by apex2000 View Post
Simply 'separate the good from the bad' is perfectly good. You could use: separate the wheat from the chaff, if you want to appear to be, say, erudite.
I wouldn't call it that erudite. Like many of our most expressive idioms, it's Biblical. But it's certainly in colloquial usage - in, for example, the Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young song 'Almost Cut My Hair'. Another possibility, also Biblical, is 'separate the sheep from the goats'.

Another one, which doesn't mean quite the same, is 'separate the men from the boys' (but that means making distinctions on grounds of age/ability/maturity/experience). I've also heard 'separate the gold from the dross', but that is a bit mannered.

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Old 10-Feb-2008, 15:57
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Default Re: separate the good from the bad

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I wouldn't call it that erudite.
I intended to draw a distinction between the use of 'shit' and something very much better in print. It should also provoke the use of a dictionary, with hopefully better understanding!
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