我并没有标题党,至少女主角说这个很有效的。
Mikaela: So, you think you can make it through those East Coast winters without me?
Sam: You're the best thing to ever happen to me.
Mikaela: And?
Sam: And I'll do anything for you.
Mikaela: And?
Sam: I adore you.
Mikaela: That not the word that I want to hear right now.
Sam: What are you talking about? It's the same word as the other word.
Mikaela: It's not the same word.
Sam: If I say the other word now and you forced me to say it, it won't mean anything, plus you haven't said it either. So, don't get mad at me for not saying it.
Mikaela: Yeah, but I haven't said it because guys always run when you say it first.
Sam: So do girls. Especially girls like you, with options.
Mikaela: So, this is all part of your elaborate plan to keep me interested?
Sam: It can be.
Mikaela: I hate that it's working.
Sam: Can I have a kiss?
Mikaela: We're going to make it work, I promise.
elaborate
Use the adjective elaborate when you want to describe how something is very detailed or especially complicated, like a devilish prank planned out weeks in advance.
The adjective elaborate is used to describe when something is planned with a lot of attention to detail or when something is intricate or detailed itself. The word comes from the Latin elaborare, which means "to produce by labor" but it has come to mean a lot of labor, especially work that is very complicated and precise. To imagine this word, think of a painting with lots of flourishes or a story with many sub-plots and characters that all fit together in extensive ways.