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keen
When used as an adjective to mean "eager," it is very common in British English (e.g., "He is keen on football"). In American English, words like "enthusiastic" or "excited" are more frequently used. Be careful with the word's different meanings. While "keen edge" refers to a physical blade, a "keen mind" refers to intelligence and mental sharpness. The verb form "to keen" is quite rare in everyday conversation and is mostly found in literature or when discussing traditional Irish mourning customs.
💬Casual Conversation
🎬Tuesday afternoon, Chloe is in the library while Leo is gaming in his room.
Chloe Smith
Dad wants us to help him weed the garden. You keen?
Leo Smith
Hard pass. I'm mid-match, tell him I've gone MIA.
💡
Chloe uses 'keen' as a casual way to ask if Leo is interested or enthusiastic about helping their father. Leo responds with 'hard pass' (a slang term for a firm refusal) and 'MIA' (Missing In Action), reflecting his cynical, gaming-centric personality.