In an English movie, I saw one lady tell another
Your button is undone!
meaning Your button is unbuttoned.
So can we say "Do your button" to mean Button your button?
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In an English movie, I saw one lady tell another
meaning Your button is unbuttoned. So can we say "Do your button" to mean Button your button? |
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This is completely understandable to me as well, if not idiomatic. I would add that a construction you are more likely to hear and use than
is
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In my experience, the common expression would be do up your button. You might also hear button up if button is used as a verb. I don't think you would hear native speakers say "open your button" or "close your button". |
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Button your button is an unlikely thing for a speaker of British English to say. We’d say Do your button up. Button itself is a verb as well as noun, but when used as such it, too, also often occurs with up. |
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"Do" in this case is simply a vague verb meaning "fix what's wrong with" your button. People talk like this all the time, especially us working class heroes. If your fly were open (either unzipped or unbuttoned), then someone who uses that type of expression would say "Do your fly" or "Do your zipper". It may not be a standard idiom, but it's perfectly understandable, and I wouldn't bat an eye were I to hear it. I don't see why you can't use it when speaking to someone. |
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Here in the US, I wouldn't use "button" as the noun. I'd use the verb in one of many ways:
And so on... |
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When one says that a button is undone, it is almost always understood that it is by accident that one of the buttons on a garment isn't buttoned. When a button gets unbuttoned by accident, you can say that, for example, Your top button has come undone, or My button came undone and everyone could see and they laughed at me. If you order someone to button a button that has come undone, you can tell them Fix your button. I can only find one instance where do is used to mean "button." It is in a Parenting magazine in an article advising young parents on how to teach their children to groom themselves. If the child insists that the mother button his shirt for him, the mother is advised to tell the boy Now I'll do a button, then you do a button. Basically, do your button would probably only be appropriate to say in some kind of joint attention scenario where buttons are of high salience, and where buttoning a button is a kind of effortful activity. For a non-native speaker, stick with fix your button or button your button. |
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