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A music teacher is portrayed as follows:
“She talks to everyone. She always says hello.”
Thus, is she friendly or kind?
Cambridge Dictionary defines friendly as
behaving in a pleasant, kind way towards someone
Apparently, the word is paraphrased as kind to some degree. Not limited to this, the fact is that the Chinese native speakers are very puzzled at the usage of these two words.
Do the American and British native speakers give the same answer to this?
4What does your dictionary tell you about these two adjectives? Are their definitions the same or different? Please use the [edit] key to tell us what you think; this will help us to provide a useful answer. – P. E. Dant Reinstate Monica – 2016-10-06T03:38:46.063
Please look at the definition from http://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/friendly e.g. "behaving in a pleasant, kind way towards someone". Apparently, the word is paraphrased as kind to some degree. Right?
– Shudong – 2016-10-06T03:50:41.960Not limited to this, the fact is that the Chinese native speakers are very puzzled at the usage of these two words. – Shudong – 2016-10-06T03:52:09.080
2In some English-Chinese dictionaries, friendly and kind share some identical translations. This overlapping often leads us to getting confused about their distinction. – Shudong – 2016-10-06T03:56:22.683
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It is not wise to use English-Chinese dictionaries as a learner of English except very early in your study. That will only build your skill in translating between the languages; it will not be very helpful to you in learning to think in English. Instead, try this link to consult a variety of English dictionaries, and start by learning what friend means in English. The two words sometimes connote the same trait, but they are not interchangeable in every case; sometimes the differences are idiomatic, as well.
– P. E. Dant Reinstate Monica – 2016-10-06T04:34:35.5471Please edit your question and include the dictionary citation and your comments, which are directly related to your question. Comments on ELL tend to get deleted if the mods believe they distract too much attention away from posts, in other words, comments are (or should be) temporary in nature. – Mari-Lou A – 2016-10-06T05:58:56.743
1To expand on P.E.Dant's comment, when a learner has passed the Beginner and Pre-Intermediate stage, they should consult monolingual dictionaries. The Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary is one good example, the definitions will tend to be more detailed, and there will be more examples of how to use a word, phrasal verb, or idiom correctly. It is one of the steps towards "thinking" like a native speaker, i.e. when you finally stop translating your thoughts into a second language. Some say, when your dreams are in English that means you're getting close :) – Mari-Lou A – 2016-10-06T06:09:43.127
@Shudong Do you still wonder about the difference between friendly and kind? Have we helped you? – P. E. Dant Reinstate Monica – 2016-10-06T07:30:20.430
If the word "friendly" literally meant "having the qualities of a friend", then it would have a lot in common with "kind". Friendly means, however, only having some superficial behavioral qualities of a friend; an external attitude. That's why we can say "user-friendly" about inanimate technology. – Kaz – 2016-10-06T19:11:46.910
Applications containing spyware and malware can be "user-friendly", but they are not kind to you. – Kaz – 2016-10-06T19:12:12.817
What kind of answer are you looking for? – Manuel – 2016-10-07T11:56:37.040