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		Ask for help > Native speakers ´ help is needed     
			
		 Native speakers ´ help is needed 
		
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 omfp
 
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							| Native speakers ´ help is needed 
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							| Dear friends,   If someone asks you: "How are you?", can you say "so and so"? Or would you say "More or less"?   Thanks in advance.   dina |  11 Feb 2013      
					
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 maceman
 
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							| Hello, You could say so, so ... which indicates you ´re not really great. I would not say more or less. Hope this helps. Have a great day ... not a so, so day. |  11 Feb 2013     
					
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 MoodyMoody
 
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							| We usually use "so-and-so" in slang to talk about a person we don ´t like, at least in the USA. "More or less" is an adverb phrase, so it needs an adjective to modify; it can ´t stand alone. "So-so," as maceman already noted, means not so good or mediocre, so so-so it is! |  11 Feb 2013     
					
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 ldthemagicman
 
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							| Dear Omf,   "Not HAPPY" implies "SAD".  "Not LONG" implies "SHORT".  "Not BAD" implies GOOD.   I would say what lots of other nationalities say --- "Comme ci, comme ca"; "Cosi cosa", "Etsi k-etsi", "So so", etc.   In British English:   "So-so!"   Les Douglas |  11 Feb 2013     
					
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