Adjectif

modifier

down-to-earth \Prononciation ?\

  1. Pratique, réaliste, terre-à-terre.
    • A New Yorker who uses stigmatized NYCE variants can seem cooler, more down-to-earth, more one of us, and/or tougher than one who does not. In this way, (r-0)s can give elite Wall Streeters an aura of toughness, street smarts, and regular guy status that can work for them businesswise.  (Michael Newman, New York City English, De Gruyter Mouton, 2014, page 10)
      La traduction en français de l’exemple manque. (Ajouter)
    • We’re in touch with the zeitgeist, but are too down-to-earth to be impressed.  (David Mitchell, Dishonesty is the Second-Best Policy: And Other Rules to Live By, Guardian Faber Publishing, 2019, p. 116)
      La traduction en français de l’exemple manque. (Ajouter)