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英文字典中文字典相关资料:


  • Meaning and Usage of Got You in Conversations with Younger . . .
    I recently encountered the phrase "got you" while interacting with a younger individual, and I'm trying to understand its meaning and appropriate usage in this context
  • I got you vs Ive got you - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    In colloquial American English: I got you = I've got you The video is very clear: I've got you The have is not dropped It means I'm holding you and therefore, you won't be squished as they run along because the little dog (or animal) is in danger of being trampled underfoot by others If you are about to fall off a roof or cliff,for example, and someone says it, it means they are holding
  • When should we use Got it? and Get it? [duplicate]
    I started learning english Often we hear "Got it?" sentence So I'm confusing following two sentences When should we use one over the other? 1) Got it? 2) Get it? Thank you
  • phrase usage - Difference between I got it and you got it . . .
    You got it as a question means "do you understand", but as a statement it's a response to a request, being asked to do something It's an agreement to do whatever one has been asked to do - usually a particularly affirmative agreement
  • I got something for you - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    None of that makes much sense to me I can't tell if you're disagreeing with me, or giving additional information I'm sure I've got something for you is only "informal" in AmE insofar as it includes a contraction (in my experience, Americans rarely use I have something for you, which is the relatively formal BrE version) But my point was simply that (with or without got, contracted or not
  • difference - Do you got anything? vs. Do you have anything . . .
    It's just informal; "have you got anything for me" or "do you have anything for me" would not change the meaning or tone
  • Here you are Here you go - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    14 When somebody asks you for something and you give it to them, which expression is correct or more common? eg , My little sister plays with toys and she wants to give one of her toys to me So what should she say? ' here you are ' or ' here you go '? which one is correct? What is the difference between them?
  • What does you got it mean here? - English Language Learners Stack . . .
    It probably means, "You understand What you say [or think] is correct" But we don't really have enough context In some contexts (such as when your irascible domineering boss orders you to do something at work), saying "You got it" means "I understand, and will do exactly what you have told me to do"
  • I got a cold versus I caught a cold - English Language Learners . . .
    I got this cold off you My grammar confirms the dictionary and talks about get a cold in the chapter dedicated to the verb get It also brings catch a cold to exemplify English collocations However, I was browsing the Internet and it seems that, at least for Americans, if we say I got a cold it is kind of uneducated
  • Can you say “get talking”? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    The conversation is unplanned, whereas in your example you are making arrangements for a future discussion I met a woman at the poetry reading and we got to talking, and she said she was the poet's nextdoor neighbor when they were teenagers, and that he was a juvenile delinquent who spent some time in juvie for stealing cars





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