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#1
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| leave a bad taste in your mouth. Don't get it. sabrina |
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#2
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| If something unpleasant happens, and people feel uncomfortable about it, it is said to leave a bad taste. |
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#3
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We had been dating for two months and I liked him very much. Monday night we went out and he became drunk and abusive. He has called me ten times since but I haven't returned his phone calls. His behavior on Monday left a bad taste in my mouth. |
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#4
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leave a bad taste in your mouth Definition if an experience leaves a bad taste in your mouth, you have an unpleasant memory of it I think we all felt that he'd been treated unfairly and it left a bad taste in people's mouths. Here, it refers to "he'd been treated unfairly", does it mean that everyone has bad or unpleasant memory of someone's being treated unfairly? I see the definition. But after reading their example, I got confused. Thank you. TDOL. Wish you have a nice weekend. :D :D :D :D :D :D sabrina |
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#5
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Mike, Excellent example. Can I change the idiom a bit to "leave a good taste in my mouth"? (hehehe, I was just trying to play word game, but don't know if it makes sense in your language.) Noam Chomsky's incredible innovation of Transformational Rule helps ESL teachers better understand the complicated structure of grammar. His theory left a good taste in my mouth. |
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#6
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