Notes on Nuance: "Long On, Short On"
Note how the construction "long on _____, short on _____" can be used to create a pithy contrast.
"The magazine editors I met as a young reporter were like most of the young developers and young attorneys—long on enthusiasm, short on experience."
—Mimi Swartz, "No Promises" (1987)
Note how the construction works just as well if you switch the syntax: start with "short on _____" and then close with "long on _____."
"We put up with this kind of thing from Prince for decades: every time he came out with a new spiritual paradigm he shifted the goalposts, changed the rap, gave out a new party line which was short on convincing detail but long on wishy-washy utopian shine."
—Ian Penman, "The Question of U" (2019)
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