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Anonymous Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Agree To/With

1)What's the difference between agreeing to* and agreeing *with something or someone?
2)I believe agree to is followed by a noun, as in agree to the terms. And agree with is followed by something someone said.
3)Would it be wrong to say "I agree *to* what you said"
  

Top answer

Anonymous 1)What's the difference between agreeing to* and agreeing *with something or someone? ) Anonymous 3)Would it be wrong to say "I agree *to* what you said" Yes, if what she said was a demand, suggestion, etc; no, if what she said was an idea or opinion.

  • Anonymous 1)What's the difference between agreeing to* and agreeing *with something or someone?
  • ) Anonymous 3)Would it be wrong to say "I agree *to* what you said" Yes, if what she said was a demand, suggestion, etc; no, if what she said was an idea or opinion.
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1 Answers
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Anonymous1)What's the difference between agreeing to* and agreeing *with something or someone?
We agree to something (a contract, a decision, a command, etc.)
We agree with someone (or someone's idea, opinion, etc.)
Anonymous3)Would it be wrong to say "I agree *to* what you said"
Yes, if what she said was a

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