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		Ask for help > Choose the Adjective     
			
		 Choose the Adjective 
		
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 nhatminh0904
 
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							| Choose the Adjective 
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							| Please tell me What word is right:
She had a toothache.She was unpleased/ unpleasant
Thanks |  4 Apr 2019      
					
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 douglas
 
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							|  She was not pleased.   It was unpleasant. |  4 Apr 2019     
					
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 RabbitWho
 
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							| displeased is a word.. I�ve never heard unpleased.. I�d say they are both wrong! |  4 Apr 2019     
					
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 L. habach
 
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							| "unpleasant" exists in the Cambridge dictionary. |  4 Apr 2019     
					
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 Aisha77
 
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							| Unpleased seems to be a british word. Under my point of view, this one is correct... |  4 Apr 2019     
					
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 almaz
 
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							| FWIW, the earliest citation in the OED for unpleased is from a religious tract of 1475, while the most recent is from the Hindustani Times (2013). More pertinently, though, the dictionary editors give it a very low frequency score of 2 (words which "are almost exclusively ... not part of normal discourse and would be unknown to most people").   |  5 Apr 2019     
					
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 Aisha77
 
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							| So, better not to use it then! Thanks so much Almaz!  Have a great weekend! Aisha ;)  EDIT:I have seen many news where they use the word (nowadays news):
 
 
 
 
 Well, there are many more from magazines that I don�t know if they are reliable, but these papers are important and representative in the UK and, as I said, are related to current events... 
 I wonder if this type of "unusual words in common speech" are more used or common in cultured language... Could someone clear that up for me, please? Thanks in advance! :) 
 
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 almaz
 
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							| It has nothing to do with "cultured" language (whatever that�s supposed to mean � considering that the only culture the Daily Express espouses is one of Little Englander bigotry and racism). It�s simply much less common than �displeased� in any register. |  5 Apr 2019     
					
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 spradley03
 
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							| My mother was unpleased  (archaic English - we never use this anymore) with my actions. 
My mother was displeased with my actions. (this is moreso used instead of unpleased)
I had a unpleasant toothache, I was in pain. (adjective here) I would never say I was unpleasant - unless I was being rude. |  5 Apr 2019     
					
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 Aisha77
 
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							| Fair enough! Btw, Almaz, when I was saying "cultured language" I wasn�t talking or thinking about ideologies at all. I don�t know what that newspaper promotes. I wanted to mean a language used in "newspapers", "news media", "conferences", "lectures" and so on.... At least in Spanish there are levels of language (slang, colloquial and cultured) and it is even studied. What I wanted to know was if in English language would happen the same. Thanks so much for the responses and for taking your time to answer my doubts.  |  5 Apr 2019     
					
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