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
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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