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		Ask for help > Sporty or sportive?     
			
		 Sporty or sportive? 
		
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 sashulochka
 
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							| Sporty or sportive? 
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							| Hello everybody,  I �m wondering if there is a way to differentiate the words sportive and sporty? If a person likes sport or just goes in for sport and as a result has sporty (sportive) body? Thanks for your help))) |  29 Feb 2016      
					
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 alien boy
 
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							| Sportive is a word I �ve hardly ever heard used. Normally I �d use  �an athletic body �.
Cheers,
AB |  29 Feb 2016     
					
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 Apodo
 
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							| I agree with AB. Someone has an athletic body.   Someone who enjoys playing lots of sports or outdoor activities can be called sporty. It �s an informal word. I never use sportive.  |  29 Feb 2016     
					
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 [email protected]
 
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							| After 49 years on this Earth I have never heard (or indeed wish to hear or read it again) the word  �sportive �.  Obviously an American aberration.  |  29 Feb 2016     
					
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 alien boy
 
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							|  Hi�[email protected] it�s actually�not American English, but dates back to Elizabethan times.�These days it�s rather archaic, unless it�s refering to certain cycling events. I have occasionally heard sportive used when describing frolicsome animals. Mind you, I wouldn�t mind betting that it has been used more in American English than British English over the 20th century. Maybe I�ll have to stick it in the Google Ngram viewer & find out! � Cheers, AB� �
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 redcamarocruiser
 
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							| I agree with Alien Boy that it is not American English. There is an entry in dictionary.com for it but is a meaning other than athletic: playful or frolicsome. I think that sashulochka meant athletic, not playful. |  29 Feb 2016     
					
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 sashulochka
 
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							| Thank you all for your help. I �ve never used "sportive" but once I heard it from my student.  The free dictionary gives such definitions -  1. Playful; frolicsome. 2. Relating to or interested in sports. 3. Archaic Amorous or wanton.The second meaning was confusing for me.  Now it �s clear)   |  1 Mar 2016     
					
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