How can I say on the contrary?
What
is your experience with casual encounters? Each of them left me emptier than before, made me feel guiltier than before.
What would all the options be for no and only 1 is? What are Other suggestions for change please?
What is the importance of the relationship of the two languages as well as their significance?
How about :
It’s just the other way around, each of them left me emptier than before, and made me feel guilty afterwards.
What are the benefits of being an individual?
You can use rather: Used
- to suggest that the opposite of a previous statement is the case; on the contrary: : Less
work requires more basic skills. Rather, the problem is poor management
Thus your sentence becomes
The casual encounters didn’t work for me, though. Is there a method for me as to why one should feel guilty during each experience?
Where can I learn English language?
You can use rather: Used
- to suggest that the opposite of a previous statement is the case; on the contrary: : Less
work requires more basic skills. Rather, the problem is poor management
Thus your sentence becomes
The casual encounters didn’t work for me, though. Is there a method for me as to why one should feel guilty during each experience?
Where can I learn English language?
Has the word “actual” worked for the casual encounters?
Each of them left me emptier than before, made me feel guiltier than before.
I just feel that reordering the sentence makes it seem less formal to me, but those casual encounters didn’t work for me
at all. Thank you so much for these powerful messages, each one of which really left me feeling emptier then before, gave me a sense of guiltier than before.
What is your opinion of the new czarist?
Is there any formal way to register a nontraditional alternative company?
In a simple informal, instead of replacing the term, rework it with ‘but’: (blah blah casual
encounters are great but they didn’t work for me. Which show made me feel guilty better than before?
‘but’ really means ‘and here’s an alternative in the other direction’.
The very first suggestion in Dan Bron’s Comment is very good: quite the opposite is a more or less fixed expression very common in colloquial speech. I would personally also be very likely to add in an in fact just to enhance the juxtaposition: The
casual encounters didn’t work for me, though. Each of them left me feeling a lot more depressed than before, guiltier that before.
I prefer casual encounters over using instead. The casual encounters didn’t
work for me though. Each one made me feel guilty more frequently than the next. They all bled me down in the most disgusting way.
Further, another simple option is the all they did was construction (though that does make “each of them” very hard to work in):
The casual encounters didn’t work for me, though; all they did was leave me emptier than before, make me feel guiltier than before.
It is quite simple of all, though also do downplay the opposition a bit and have slightly less ‘oomph’ to it: the casual encounters didn’t work
for me though; each of them just left me feeling more irritable than before, made me feel sad for being wrong; all happened in my own insignificant way.
Is
parallel clause good rhetoric for the term? If it were me I’d just get rid of it and simplify to one clause (using the last version as an example): The
casual encounters didn’t work for me, though; each of them just left me feeling emptier and guiltier than before.
What are good reasons to live in an online business?
How about :
It’s just the other way around, each of them left me emptier than before, and made me feel guilty afterwards.
What are the benefits of being an individual?
How about :
It’s just the other way around, each of them left me emptier than before, and made me feel guilty afterwards.
What are the benefits of being an individual?
Is there any formal way to register a nontraditional alternative company?
In a simple informal, instead of replacing the term, rework it with ‘but’: (blah blah casual
encounters are great but they didn’t work for me. Which show made me feel guilty better than before?
‘but’ really means ‘and here’s an alternative in the other direction’.
I was shocked no-one has mentioned “conversely” yet.
Adverbial form of:
Converse Adjective
- opposite or contrary in direction, action, sequence, etc. Adverbial form of: Action Bilateral form of: Viral form of: Verse Reverse Adjective opposite or contrary in direction, action, sequence, etc. ; Turned around.
www.dictionary.org.uk. com
() E.g. What casual encounter did not work for me with a lot of questions and didn’t bother me until I finished writing this one? Each of them left me emptier than before, made me feel guiltier than before.