Exercise one hour a day, keep illness away.

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diamondcutter

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Oct 21, 2014
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English Teacher
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Chinese
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China
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China
Exercise one hour a day, keep illness away.

I saw this slogan in a school. I think it’s totally Chinglish. What it wants to express is this: if you exercise one hour a day, you’ll keep illnesses away. But this sentence is too long and is not suitable for a slogan. Dear teachers, could you think of a slogan which carries the same meaning as the long sentence?
 
“An hour of exercise daily will keep you healthy.”
I think this should be saying the same thing...

Disclaimer: I am not a teacher.
 
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@A.G.E any member may answer a question, provided that if they are not a teacher they say so. I have edited your post to add the required disclaimer this time.
 
@diamondcutter There's a very well known proverb or maxim in English: an apple a day keeps the doctor away. The OP seems to be a variant of that, and not Chinglish as far as I can see. Slogans often sacrifice precision of meaning for the sake of brevity and pithiness.
 
Exercising an hour a day keeps illness/the doctor away.
I think the subject should be a gerund.
 
Hi, probus. Do you mean the OP is acceptable in English?
 
What do you think of this version?

An hour’s exercise a day keeps the doctor away.
 
@diamondcutter Your sentence is only eight words long. Many slogans are that long.
 
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