sober v. serious v. severe [vocabulary]

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hhtt21

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teechar

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Re: sober v. serious v. severe

"Either way, she decided it was time to be severe".
That's not a natural expression, given the context you've described.
 

hhtt21

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Re: sober v. serious v. severe

That's not a natural expression, given the context you've described.

Because I tried to prepared the context, the context might be wrong but did you look at the link?

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Raymott

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Re: sober v. serious v. severe

She has just been laughing with him, and she is afraid he might have thought she was flirting with him. "Serious/severe" (here) means business-like, professional, more restrained.
 

hhtt21

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Re: sober v. serious v. severe

She has just been laughing with him, and she is afraid he might have thought she was flirting with him. "Serious/severe" (here) means business-like, professional, more restrained.

How do you understand that "she has just been laughing with him." ? I read the book but I cannot see it? Would you please explain?

https://books.google.com.tr/books?id...ere%22&f=false by John le Carre

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Raymott

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Re: sober v. serious v. severe

Huh? I read some of link you gave. I assumed you had also read it. Page 231.
A paragraph above your quote, you should find this: "Melik's sister, she corrected herself and heard herself laughing hilariously with him at her slip of the tongue."
So, I think we can accept that she was laughing with him, even without reading the following paragraph in which she expresses to herself the wish to become friends with him, but not perhaps in the way he would like.
 
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hhtt21

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Re: sober v. serious v. severe

She has just been laughing with him, and she is afraid he might have thought she was flirting with him. "Serious/severe" (here) means business-like, professional, more restrained.

What do you think about the word sober for this context which might be an alternative?

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Raymott

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Re: sober v. serious v. severe

I wouldn't use it. It's possible, but I haven't read enough of the story to know whether the character would use that word. It's normally used to mean "not drunk".
 
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