Asked by r
If you decide to get married, a trade-off would be that you have to give up being single.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The sentence is fine as written. A few stylistic alternatives and minor notes:
- Slightly more natural: "If you decide to get married, you'll have to give up being single."
- More concise: "Deciding to marry means giving up being single."
- Neutral/less negative: "If you decide to get married, you'll leave single life behind."
- Formal: "If one decides to marry, one must forgo singlehood."
- Active trade phrasing: "Getting married trades singlehood for married life."
- Casual: "If you choose to get married, you won't be single anymore."
Note: "trade-off" (hyphen) and "tradeoff" (no hyphen) are both used; "will have to" sounds stronger/clearer than "have to" in conditional statements.
- Slightly more natural: "If you decide to get married, you'll have to give up being single."
- More concise: "Deciding to marry means giving up being single."
- Neutral/less negative: "If you decide to get married, you'll leave single life behind."
- Formal: "If one decides to marry, one must forgo singlehood."
- Active trade phrasing: "Getting married trades singlehood for married life."
- Casual: "If you choose to get married, you won't be single anymore."
Note: "trade-off" (hyphen) and "tradeoff" (no hyphen) are both used; "will have to" sounds stronger/clearer than "have to" in conditional statements.
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