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Hello, I'd be more than happy if you could help me to understand this verb better. I made up all these sentences. if you would use the other preposition or maybe both, let me know, thank you ^^ I read all the threads I could find. I reminded him of my sister's request for him not to wear blue...
Hi guys English newbie is here and want to ask this question which about "remind me of you" & "remind you of me?" What do they mean? It is confusing me. Do they mean the same even if object is changed? cheers.
remind me of you / remind you of me - WordReference Forums
Remind me to give it to you - you are talking about the future. Remind me of giving it to you - You seem to be asking your listener, contrary to normal human logic, to remind you of something that happened in the past and that you quite obviously remember yourself.
Hi everyone, I would like to know which phrasal verb is the correct one to be used when talking about an appointment. I have heard some saying "remind about" is the correct one because it talks about something in the future that I have to do. And also, I have heard others saying "remind of" is...
Hi, I am writing a card to my teacher and at the same time, I'm preparing a gift. Therefore, on the card I've written "I hope the gift will remind you how amazing you are/ remind you of how amazing you are" Is of necessary here?
Hola :) Quiero saber cuando usar cada preposición. ¿Podría decirse que "remind of" se usa cuando algo te recuerda algo y "remind about" cuando se debe recordar a alguien sobre algo? Por ejemplo: A sunny day reminds me of my last holiday on the beach. Fortunately, my daughter...
Yes, it's transitive, but "remind' generally* needs a person as an object, as in the eariler examples. If it's just you that is thinking of these beautiful and horrible moments, you can say: "I am reminded of beautiful . . . " * I say "generally" because if I say "always," someone will come up with a counterexample, but I can't think of any myself.
- Need I remind you what happened to the person who lied to him? 2. Need I say more?
The "English teacher" * should have said, as MBK wrote in post #3, One thing I just want to remind you about before we get started..." * My guess is that this person is not a certified English teacher but just a native English speaker passing himself/herself off as an English teacher (very common on YouTube, by the way).
to remind someone of something I'd say for example: 'Thanks for your reminding me of the meeting.' or 'Thanks for your reminder.' Chafattouma, thanks for your reply! So do you mean it's wrong to say "thanks for your kind reminding"? Instead, we should day "thanks for your kind reminder"?
The Grio: What we did on our summer vacations: The legend of Oak Bluffs
If you’ve never visited the Martha’s Vineyard enclave of Oak Bluffs—or Martha’s Vineyard at all, for that matter—you might envision it as immortalized in the 1994 cult-classic film The Inkwell (which, ...
What we did on our summer vacations: The legend of Oak Bluffs