0
Jawel Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Are these uses of comma correct?

Hello everyone, have a nice day.

I want to mean that with you, I learned to walk.

How can I say it on the non-inverted way?

If I say: "I learned to walk with you", It will be a little bit strange. Because It means like

"I walk with you". But actually I want to express "learn with you", not "walk with you"

Therefore,

1-) I learned to walk , with you.

2-) I learned with you to walk.

3-) With you, I learned to walk.

Are they correct gramatically?

  

Top answer

Jawel 1-) I learned to walk, with you. 2-) I learned with you to walk. 3-) With you, I learned to walk.

  • Jawel 1-) I learned to walk, with you.
  • 2-) I learned with you to walk.
  • 3-) With you, I learned to walk.
  • (3) is the best.
  • I wouldn't use the other two.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
Jawel1-) I learned to walk, with you.
2-) I learned with you to walk.
3-) With you, I learned to walk.

(3) is the best. I wouldn't use the other two.

Related Questions