I want you to be happy Means, i want you to feel happy Like right now😂 and being happy is in continuous tense that means as you say it, it is still happening for example I am being happy you were happy As you are saying this sentence, you still are happy Đồng nghĩa với happiness happy is the adjective happiness is the noun
|@aakritisingh649 happiness is a noun See i changed something into happiness, therefore you can regard happiness as an abstract thing Happy is an adjective, used to describe something See i changed white into happy, therefore proving that it. 【ネイティブ回答】「Get happy」と「Be happy」はどう違うの?質問に13件の回答が集まっています!Hinativeでは"英語(アメリカ)"や外国語の勉強で気になったことを、ネイティブスピーカーに簡単に質問できます。 Happiness happy is the adjective happiness is the noun
Pleased, glad,glad and happy are closer in meaning But i am happy is also used to describe a general satisfaction with life, as the opposite of i am depressed. i am pleased is usually a more temporary feeling, associated with something particular that caused that feeling| happy and glad are pretty much the same, but pleased implies a qualification I am pleased with the results. 【ネイティブ回答】「make me...」と「make me...」はどう違うの?質問に2件の回答が集まっています!Hinativeでは"英語(アメリカ)"や外国語の勉強で気になったことを、ネイティブスピーカーに簡単に質問できます。 例えば、'it made me happy when i won first place'のように。 'it make me happy' is grammatically incorrect, because it's past tense it should be 'it made me happy' 'it makes me happy' is when you're talking about something in the present e.g 'it makes when happy when i eat food'
Glad means you're satisfied at the result of something I'm glad that my team won. happy is more general and the most commonly used Delighted is a more intense version of happy and is more formal.的同义词 |„frohen freitag“ is the correct translation but it is not something we would really say, better would be „schönen freitag“ meaning „i wish you a happy friday“|@ninasprogress i agree, but people use this often, too:) You can use both though Happy time的同義字the first is singular and the second plural
— that last holiday was a happy time You would use 'happy times' for a more sweeping statement, often in response to someone else recalling something from the past — do you remember when we used to go to the match every saturday as kids? — oh yes, they were.
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