Andrew_P
What's the difference between "NOT so" and "NOT that" with adj? I'm interested in constructions "not so/that + adjective". For example: You're not so (that) right (clever). Which is better to use - "so" or "that" - in negative? Is there any difference? Does it depend on the adjective which goes next?
Jan 21, 2020 7:16 PM
Answers · 7
1
so + adjective implies a general exagerated quality (abstract) that + adjective implies a comparison to a specific quality present (concrete) Example: You are so bad (you are very bad) You are that bad (you are as bad as (context)) Why so fast? (Why very fast?) Why that fast? (Why as fast as (context)?) "that + adjective" I will give further examples The car was going 75mph, why that fast? "why that fast"- why as fast as 75mph?" he uses a limo, yes he is that rich.
January 21, 2020
1
Isaac’s answer to a good explanation of the that/so topic. To answer your basic question, there is no “rule” or common usage that distinguishes “so” from “that.” The distinction is only the one Isaac mentions, about how specific the comparison is. One last note. “You’re not so clever.” would often be said, “you’re not as clever as you think you are.”
January 21, 2020
Thank you.
January 21, 2020
In this instance, neither of the options sounds natural. Maybe if the example was "You're not so (that) great." Both imply that the person isn't as wonderful as they are pretending to be. I would personally use "You aren't that great" or "not so smart". It allows for a scale, where "right" is either true or false.
January 21, 2020
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