Your Grammar Teacher: Difference between frown at and frown on/upon

Habeeb Waliyu



To frown at means to make serious, angry  or worried expression by bringing your eyebrows close together so that lines appear on your forehead. For example:

1. She frowned at him disapprovingly

2.  Her mother frowned at me for beating her daughter

3. You don't need to frown at me because of the mistake I made.


To frown on or upon means to disapprove of something,  especially someone's behaviour. For example:

1. Even though divorce is legal, it's still frowned upon.

2. She looked with a puzzled frown on her face

3. The company frowns on sexual relationship among the employees.


It should be noted that frown can function as a noun: "the frown on madam's face is scary."

Frown can also function as a verb: "she was frowning at the  woman."


We need to be grammatically inclined

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