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Vkr6078 Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

You have to something.

You have got to do something.

You got to do something.

You have gotten to do something.

Are all the above sentences convey the same meaning ? If not, could you please explain the difference between them.
  

Top answer

vkr6078 You have to something. You have got to do something. You got to do something.

  • vkr6078 You have to something.
  • You have got to do something.
  • You got to do something.
  • The first one is incorrect (according to your scheme for the sentences); probably you meant "You have to do something".
  • With that correction, all three mean the same, but the second is more informal/conversational than the first.
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1 Answers
0
vkr6078You have to something. You have got to do something. You got to do something.
The first one is incorrect (according to your scheme for the sentences); probably you meant "You have to do something". With that correction, all three mean the same, but the second is more informal/conversational than the first. The last one is very casual convers

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