Naturalness of the following conversation

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amishera

Member
Joined
Sep 17, 2016
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Bengali; Bangla
Home Country
Bangladesh
Current Location
United States
The following conversation:

Clara:What happened just now, Mark? You werne't very kind when you were talking with Ted. What do you have against him?
speaker.gif
Mark:I just don't like him at all.
speaker.gif
Clara:Why? Is there something in particular?
speaker.gif
Mark:Well, he has such a mean streak in him! I went to his office to ask him for some help, and he simply turned up his nose at me! I was so angry that I wanted to slap him! He wasn't like that before he got the job. Now he's such a snob!
speaker.gif
Clara:You want my advice? Let it go.
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Mark:Of course, logically I know you're right, but somehow I just can't bring myself to forget it. Even the mention of his name starts me fuming.


sounds quite unnatural (particularly "turned up his nose at me", "bring myself to forget it", "starts me fuming", etc). Does native speakers talk like that? I have never heard people talking like this. I need to cross-check.

Thanks
 
It sounds like someone has tried to write the way people speak. However, it doesn't seem that unnatural to me. Turn your nose up is OK in British English. I wouldn't say gets me fuming.
 
It sounds fairly natural to me, though the first couple of lines are a little stilted given the rest of the conversation. A natural, casual conversation between two people who know each other well might be:

- I can't stand him!
- Why?
- He's so mean. I asked him for a bit of help and he sneered at me/blanked me. I wanted to slap him! He's turned into such a snob since he started this job.
- My advice - let it go.
- Yeah, I know. I'd love to but I can't - I can't even stand hearing his name.
 
I think the website is using British english. That is why it sounded different.
 
I think the website is using British English [STRIKE]english[/STRIKE]. That is why it sounded different.

Both members who replied to your original post are British.

Note my correction above.
 
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