Plain good sense












2















I am not a native speaker and i want to translate an article.. Can you please tell me What does " she is full of plain good sense" mean? Is plain here an adjective?










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  • I'm not sure why, but oxforddictionaries identifies the specific usage in your example as an adverb (informal, as submodifier), Used for emphasis - their usage example being perhaps the youth was just plain stupid. Perhaps that's because in their example it's modifying stupid, which is definitely an adjective itself - but in practice I think it would be a bit punctilious to say your plain is an adjective simply because good sense is a noun.

    – FumbleFingers
    8 hours ago











  • If this is the article you're referring to ( aeon.co/ideas/…), plain is italicized, i.e, its context gives it its specific meaning: She (a sage maid) gains her wisdom (good sense) through years of life experience (occupation and financial constraints, particularly), not through ideology...so she tires of practicality and becomes a philosophy professor. The End.

    – KannE
    5 hours ago


















2















I am not a native speaker and i want to translate an article.. Can you please tell me What does " she is full of plain good sense" mean? Is plain here an adjective?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Rana Ghamdi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • I'm not sure why, but oxforddictionaries identifies the specific usage in your example as an adverb (informal, as submodifier), Used for emphasis - their usage example being perhaps the youth was just plain stupid. Perhaps that's because in their example it's modifying stupid, which is definitely an adjective itself - but in practice I think it would be a bit punctilious to say your plain is an adjective simply because good sense is a noun.

    – FumbleFingers
    8 hours ago











  • If this is the article you're referring to ( aeon.co/ideas/…), plain is italicized, i.e, its context gives it its specific meaning: She (a sage maid) gains her wisdom (good sense) through years of life experience (occupation and financial constraints, particularly), not through ideology...so she tires of practicality and becomes a philosophy professor. The End.

    – KannE
    5 hours ago
















2












2








2








I am not a native speaker and i want to translate an article.. Can you please tell me What does " she is full of plain good sense" mean? Is plain here an adjective?










share|improve this question







New contributor




Rana Ghamdi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I am not a native speaker and i want to translate an article.. Can you please tell me What does " she is full of plain good sense" mean? Is plain here an adjective?







meaning meaning-in-context phrase-meaning






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New contributor




Rana Ghamdi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




Rana Ghamdi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






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Rana Ghamdi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 8 hours ago









Rana GhamdiRana Ghamdi

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152




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Rana Ghamdi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Rana Ghamdi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • I'm not sure why, but oxforddictionaries identifies the specific usage in your example as an adverb (informal, as submodifier), Used for emphasis - their usage example being perhaps the youth was just plain stupid. Perhaps that's because in their example it's modifying stupid, which is definitely an adjective itself - but in practice I think it would be a bit punctilious to say your plain is an adjective simply because good sense is a noun.

    – FumbleFingers
    8 hours ago











  • If this is the article you're referring to ( aeon.co/ideas/…), plain is italicized, i.e, its context gives it its specific meaning: She (a sage maid) gains her wisdom (good sense) through years of life experience (occupation and financial constraints, particularly), not through ideology...so she tires of practicality and becomes a philosophy professor. The End.

    – KannE
    5 hours ago





















  • I'm not sure why, but oxforddictionaries identifies the specific usage in your example as an adverb (informal, as submodifier), Used for emphasis - their usage example being perhaps the youth was just plain stupid. Perhaps that's because in their example it's modifying stupid, which is definitely an adjective itself - but in practice I think it would be a bit punctilious to say your plain is an adjective simply because good sense is a noun.

    – FumbleFingers
    8 hours ago











  • If this is the article you're referring to ( aeon.co/ideas/…), plain is italicized, i.e, its context gives it its specific meaning: She (a sage maid) gains her wisdom (good sense) through years of life experience (occupation and financial constraints, particularly), not through ideology...so she tires of practicality and becomes a philosophy professor. The End.

    – KannE
    5 hours ago



















I'm not sure why, but oxforddictionaries identifies the specific usage in your example as an adverb (informal, as submodifier), Used for emphasis - their usage example being perhaps the youth was just plain stupid. Perhaps that's because in their example it's modifying stupid, which is definitely an adjective itself - but in practice I think it would be a bit punctilious to say your plain is an adjective simply because good sense is a noun.

– FumbleFingers
8 hours ago





I'm not sure why, but oxforddictionaries identifies the specific usage in your example as an adverb (informal, as submodifier), Used for emphasis - their usage example being perhaps the youth was just plain stupid. Perhaps that's because in their example it's modifying stupid, which is definitely an adjective itself - but in practice I think it would be a bit punctilious to say your plain is an adjective simply because good sense is a noun.

– FumbleFingers
8 hours ago













If this is the article you're referring to ( aeon.co/ideas/…), plain is italicized, i.e, its context gives it its specific meaning: She (a sage maid) gains her wisdom (good sense) through years of life experience (occupation and financial constraints, particularly), not through ideology...so she tires of practicality and becomes a philosophy professor. The End.

– KannE
5 hours ago







If this is the article you're referring to ( aeon.co/ideas/…), plain is italicized, i.e, its context gives it its specific meaning: She (a sage maid) gains her wisdom (good sense) through years of life experience (occupation and financial constraints, particularly), not through ideology...so she tires of practicality and becomes a philosophy professor. The End.

– KannE
5 hours ago












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















1














The phrase "plain good sense" means something like "basic, simple rational thought" in the praiseworthy sense that it does not involve any sort of casuistry or any pseudo-sophistication.



I would understand plain as an adjective modifying the noun phrase "good sense".






share|improve this answer
























  • I'd say it's an "adjective" too. But per my comment above, might OxfordDictionary be calling it an "adverb" because their example happens to have it modifying another adjective (stupid, as opposed to good sense here)?

    – FumbleFingers
    7 hours ago











  • @FumbleFingers: Right, "stupid" there's an adjective alone.

    – TRomano
    7 hours ago











  • Yes, but let's not call "good sense" a noun phrase. A noun phrase can have a determiner, but what "plain" modifies here cannot have a determiner. It's an N-bar (written N'), not a NP.

    – Greg Lee
    6 hours ago











  • @GregLee Sorry, Greg, you've lost me. Is "home cooking" a noun phrase or an N-bar?

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago













  • And do you mean that "good sense" can never have a determiner? Or only when plain is modifying it?

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago





















0














Plain is a adverb meaning "in a plain manner : without obscurity or ambiguity", that is clearly or unequivocally. From Merriam Webster dictionary.



Definition of plain (Entry 3 of 5): https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/plain



she is full of plain good sense






share|improve this answer


























  • Can you explain the whole phrase to me please?

    – Rana Ghamdi
    8 hours ago











  • @RanaGhamdi Explanation: Author is trying convey that she has unequivocally or clearly a good sense.

    – ubi hatt
    7 hours ago











  • It's not an adverb, though there is an adverb "plainly" with a related meaning: "She is plainly full of good sense."

    – Greg Lee
    6 hours ago













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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









1














The phrase "plain good sense" means something like "basic, simple rational thought" in the praiseworthy sense that it does not involve any sort of casuistry or any pseudo-sophistication.



I would understand plain as an adjective modifying the noun phrase "good sense".






share|improve this answer
























  • I'd say it's an "adjective" too. But per my comment above, might OxfordDictionary be calling it an "adverb" because their example happens to have it modifying another adjective (stupid, as opposed to good sense here)?

    – FumbleFingers
    7 hours ago











  • @FumbleFingers: Right, "stupid" there's an adjective alone.

    – TRomano
    7 hours ago











  • Yes, but let's not call "good sense" a noun phrase. A noun phrase can have a determiner, but what "plain" modifies here cannot have a determiner. It's an N-bar (written N'), not a NP.

    – Greg Lee
    6 hours ago











  • @GregLee Sorry, Greg, you've lost me. Is "home cooking" a noun phrase or an N-bar?

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago













  • And do you mean that "good sense" can never have a determiner? Or only when plain is modifying it?

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago


















1














The phrase "plain good sense" means something like "basic, simple rational thought" in the praiseworthy sense that it does not involve any sort of casuistry or any pseudo-sophistication.



I would understand plain as an adjective modifying the noun phrase "good sense".






share|improve this answer
























  • I'd say it's an "adjective" too. But per my comment above, might OxfordDictionary be calling it an "adverb" because their example happens to have it modifying another adjective (stupid, as opposed to good sense here)?

    – FumbleFingers
    7 hours ago











  • @FumbleFingers: Right, "stupid" there's an adjective alone.

    – TRomano
    7 hours ago











  • Yes, but let's not call "good sense" a noun phrase. A noun phrase can have a determiner, but what "plain" modifies here cannot have a determiner. It's an N-bar (written N'), not a NP.

    – Greg Lee
    6 hours ago











  • @GregLee Sorry, Greg, you've lost me. Is "home cooking" a noun phrase or an N-bar?

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago













  • And do you mean that "good sense" can never have a determiner? Or only when plain is modifying it?

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago
















1












1








1







The phrase "plain good sense" means something like "basic, simple rational thought" in the praiseworthy sense that it does not involve any sort of casuistry or any pseudo-sophistication.



I would understand plain as an adjective modifying the noun phrase "good sense".






share|improve this answer













The phrase "plain good sense" means something like "basic, simple rational thought" in the praiseworthy sense that it does not involve any sort of casuistry or any pseudo-sophistication.



I would understand plain as an adjective modifying the noun phrase "good sense".







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 7 hours ago









TRomanoTRomano

17.1k21946




17.1k21946













  • I'd say it's an "adjective" too. But per my comment above, might OxfordDictionary be calling it an "adverb" because their example happens to have it modifying another adjective (stupid, as opposed to good sense here)?

    – FumbleFingers
    7 hours ago











  • @FumbleFingers: Right, "stupid" there's an adjective alone.

    – TRomano
    7 hours ago











  • Yes, but let's not call "good sense" a noun phrase. A noun phrase can have a determiner, but what "plain" modifies here cannot have a determiner. It's an N-bar (written N'), not a NP.

    – Greg Lee
    6 hours ago











  • @GregLee Sorry, Greg, you've lost me. Is "home cooking" a noun phrase or an N-bar?

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago













  • And do you mean that "good sense" can never have a determiner? Or only when plain is modifying it?

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago





















  • I'd say it's an "adjective" too. But per my comment above, might OxfordDictionary be calling it an "adverb" because their example happens to have it modifying another adjective (stupid, as opposed to good sense here)?

    – FumbleFingers
    7 hours ago











  • @FumbleFingers: Right, "stupid" there's an adjective alone.

    – TRomano
    7 hours ago











  • Yes, but let's not call "good sense" a noun phrase. A noun phrase can have a determiner, but what "plain" modifies here cannot have a determiner. It's an N-bar (written N'), not a NP.

    – Greg Lee
    6 hours ago











  • @GregLee Sorry, Greg, you've lost me. Is "home cooking" a noun phrase or an N-bar?

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago













  • And do you mean that "good sense" can never have a determiner? Or only when plain is modifying it?

    – TRomano
    6 hours ago



















I'd say it's an "adjective" too. But per my comment above, might OxfordDictionary be calling it an "adverb" because their example happens to have it modifying another adjective (stupid, as opposed to good sense here)?

– FumbleFingers
7 hours ago





I'd say it's an "adjective" too. But per my comment above, might OxfordDictionary be calling it an "adverb" because their example happens to have it modifying another adjective (stupid, as opposed to good sense here)?

– FumbleFingers
7 hours ago













@FumbleFingers: Right, "stupid" there's an adjective alone.

– TRomano
7 hours ago





@FumbleFingers: Right, "stupid" there's an adjective alone.

– TRomano
7 hours ago













Yes, but let's not call "good sense" a noun phrase. A noun phrase can have a determiner, but what "plain" modifies here cannot have a determiner. It's an N-bar (written N'), not a NP.

– Greg Lee
6 hours ago





Yes, but let's not call "good sense" a noun phrase. A noun phrase can have a determiner, but what "plain" modifies here cannot have a determiner. It's an N-bar (written N'), not a NP.

– Greg Lee
6 hours ago













@GregLee Sorry, Greg, you've lost me. Is "home cooking" a noun phrase or an N-bar?

– TRomano
6 hours ago







@GregLee Sorry, Greg, you've lost me. Is "home cooking" a noun phrase or an N-bar?

– TRomano
6 hours ago















And do you mean that "good sense" can never have a determiner? Or only when plain is modifying it?

– TRomano
6 hours ago







And do you mean that "good sense" can never have a determiner? Or only when plain is modifying it?

– TRomano
6 hours ago















0














Plain is a adverb meaning "in a plain manner : without obscurity or ambiguity", that is clearly or unequivocally. From Merriam Webster dictionary.



Definition of plain (Entry 3 of 5): https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/plain



she is full of plain good sense






share|improve this answer


























  • Can you explain the whole phrase to me please?

    – Rana Ghamdi
    8 hours ago











  • @RanaGhamdi Explanation: Author is trying convey that she has unequivocally or clearly a good sense.

    – ubi hatt
    7 hours ago











  • It's not an adverb, though there is an adverb "plainly" with a related meaning: "She is plainly full of good sense."

    – Greg Lee
    6 hours ago


















0














Plain is a adverb meaning "in a plain manner : without obscurity or ambiguity", that is clearly or unequivocally. From Merriam Webster dictionary.



Definition of plain (Entry 3 of 5): https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/plain



she is full of plain good sense






share|improve this answer


























  • Can you explain the whole phrase to me please?

    – Rana Ghamdi
    8 hours ago











  • @RanaGhamdi Explanation: Author is trying convey that she has unequivocally or clearly a good sense.

    – ubi hatt
    7 hours ago











  • It's not an adverb, though there is an adverb "plainly" with a related meaning: "She is plainly full of good sense."

    – Greg Lee
    6 hours ago
















0












0








0







Plain is a adverb meaning "in a plain manner : without obscurity or ambiguity", that is clearly or unequivocally. From Merriam Webster dictionary.



Definition of plain (Entry 3 of 5): https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/plain



she is full of plain good sense






share|improve this answer















Plain is a adverb meaning "in a plain manner : without obscurity or ambiguity", that is clearly or unequivocally. From Merriam Webster dictionary.



Definition of plain (Entry 3 of 5): https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/plain



she is full of plain good sense







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 7 hours ago

























answered 8 hours ago









ubi hattubi hatt

2,468420




2,468420













  • Can you explain the whole phrase to me please?

    – Rana Ghamdi
    8 hours ago











  • @RanaGhamdi Explanation: Author is trying convey that she has unequivocally or clearly a good sense.

    – ubi hatt
    7 hours ago











  • It's not an adverb, though there is an adverb "plainly" with a related meaning: "She is plainly full of good sense."

    – Greg Lee
    6 hours ago





















  • Can you explain the whole phrase to me please?

    – Rana Ghamdi
    8 hours ago











  • @RanaGhamdi Explanation: Author is trying convey that she has unequivocally or clearly a good sense.

    – ubi hatt
    7 hours ago











  • It's not an adverb, though there is an adverb "plainly" with a related meaning: "She is plainly full of good sense."

    – Greg Lee
    6 hours ago



















Can you explain the whole phrase to me please?

– Rana Ghamdi
8 hours ago





Can you explain the whole phrase to me please?

– Rana Ghamdi
8 hours ago













@RanaGhamdi Explanation: Author is trying convey that she has unequivocally or clearly a good sense.

– ubi hatt
7 hours ago





@RanaGhamdi Explanation: Author is trying convey that she has unequivocally or clearly a good sense.

– ubi hatt
7 hours ago













It's not an adverb, though there is an adverb "plainly" with a related meaning: "She is plainly full of good sense."

– Greg Lee
6 hours ago







It's not an adverb, though there is an adverb "plainly" with a related meaning: "She is plainly full of good sense."

– Greg Lee
6 hours ago












Rana Ghamdi is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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