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- Near to me or near me? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
In the NOW Corpus, near me is 31 times more common This is a different matter with some other position-related words; something can be close to me but not close me, and the same for next to, proximate to, and so forth
- Confused between Near something and Near to something
0 Actually, near something would work and I would use it over near to something Where is your book? -Near my bed Where is Wall Mart?-Near my house
- grammar - Could it be correct to say near from? - English Language . . .
Can you tell me please if this sentence is grammatically correct: My school is near from my house
- Beside VS Next to VS By [closed] - English Language Learners . . .
On the other hand "by" means "near", but a lit closer than "near" Irrespective of the fact that "beside" is more formal and "next to" is a bit more casual, I was wondering whether I have been wrong in defining the following pairs as correct or incorrect: 1 a Come and sit beside me (Correct) 1 b Come and sit next to me
- Near, Nearer, Nearest - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Take me to a near station When you are referring to a distance, you cannot place the word near as an adjective in front of a noun You should place the adjective nearby to modify the noun station in this case So the right sentence is: Take me to a nearby station However, you can use the near in front of a noun when you refer to a time, a friend or relative, or when it means "almost" as
- A person that you share the neighborhood with
Please don't vote to close this as a question that can be answered with a dictionary Most dictionaries are not clear about subtleties like what this question asks about neighbor, and the question actually asks something that's hard to look up: whether there is a word that matches a specific meaning (Theoretically a thesaurus can do that, but we all know that seldom works in practice )
- nearby (close by) as an adjective, a preposition, or an adverb
Could you tell me more about it in a more readily way? SEMANTICS:: the relationship of "nearness ()" Many locational prepositions have an associated semantic relationship that takes two arguments Usually both arguments can be locations, or one is a location and the other is a situation For instance: The tree is near nearby the river
- Difference between Its fine with me and its fine to me?
It looks like fine to me is absolutely incorrect Where did you read this sentence? It's fine with me is perfectly correct English, and a common expression It's fine to me is also perfectly good English The American who told you that It's fine to me is "wrong" simply does not understand her own language!
- Do we say to go up to somebody to mean to move towards somebody, in . . .
The temperature will go up to near one hundred today I went up to her and asked her for a match " Merriam-Webster lists up as an adverb with meaning "so as to arrive or approach", so you can argue whether it's a phrasal verb or just a verb with an adverb (certainly you can "walk up" and many other similar expressions)
- As far as I can say, as far as I know, as far as I can tell
The English language has many ambiguities such as this Consider the difference between "near" and "far" Then consider that "as near as I can tell" and "as far as I can tell" mean the same thing
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