There was a good deal of tension in the room=?

Status
Not open for further replies.

Polyester

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 29, 2014
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
Chinese
Home Country
China
Current Location
China
There was a good deal of tension in the room.

What does the "a good of tension" mean?
 
Here, a 'good deal' does not mean a 'great price' or a 'fine agreement' but rather, a 'large amount' -- so it means a lot of tension. People were uncomfortable.
 
Can I use "full of" to replace "good deal" instead?

There are full of nervous in the room.

Am I wrong?
 
You are wrong. There are requires a noun.
 
I'm making a new one, what about that below,

There are full of nervous strain in the room.

Correct?
 
May I say 'The room is full of nervous atmosphere'?
 
May I say 'The room is full of nervous atmosphere'?

"Full of atmosphere" doesn't work. An atmosphere is, it doesn't have degrees. The room had a nervous atmosphere.

"The room was full of nervous tension" is OK.
 
"There are full of _____ in the room" doesn't work no matter what noun you put in there.

"The room was full of ____" does.
 
'There is/are' should be followed by a noun (phrase) but not an adjective phrase such as 'full of something'.

Not a teacher.
 
Better to use an adjective to describe the atmosphere, mood, etc:

The room is full of people
The atmosphere in the room is tense.

not a teacher
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top