Is that meant positively or negatively?
“You’re too mature for your age”?
“You’re too mature for your age”?
After all, our universe has existed for approximately 13.8 billion years, and all of these world religions, be it Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Judaism, etc., have only existed for a few thousand years. Even a religion that has existed for tens of thousands of years can't keep up with 13.8 billion years. And if God exists,…
I would really like to have my nails done professionally at a nail salon but I'm afraid of the pain. Do all nail designs hurt under the UV lamp? For example, if I do short red nails, would that hurt under the UV lamp?
Hello folks I just got my period for the third time in 30 days. Before that, everything was regular and normal. I'm a little worried about it. Is this normal? I'm 15, by the way, if that matters.
Yes, when do I know that?
I’d consider it positive. However, it always depends on the context.
This depends on when and on what topic it was discussed. It can be both.
I would rather see it as negative.Always when something starts with the word “to”, it is too much.Zb too expensive, too late, too cold/warm etc
Being ripe for his age is actually something positive but too mature sounds negative
Without a context, I interpret this as “you are preluctant and mixes you too much in things that don’t concern you yet”
Of course not meant
It’s insane. Because no one can be mature. Maximum springtime.