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Nithila Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

does given two sentences make same meaning ?

  1. Give me your phone number and I will call you up when we are in town.

  2. Give me your phone number and I will call up you when we are in town.

does given two sentences make same meaning ? please help me
  1. I don't care for his behaviour.

  2. I don't care his behaviour.

does these two sentence give same meaning?
  

Top answer

Hi, I will call up you is not idiomatic. I will call up my brother would be okay. care for = like I don't like his behavior is okay.

  • Hi, I will call up you is not idiomatic.
  • I will call up my brother would be okay.
  • care for = like I don't like his behavior is okay.
  • I don't care his behavior is ungrammatical.
  • Best wishes, - A.
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4 Answers
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Hi,

I will call up you is not idiomatic. I will call up my brother would be okay.

care for = like I don't like his behavior is okay. I don't care his behavior is ungrammatical.

Best wishes, - A.

Edit. In each of your pairs, the first example is fine. I will call up you has the sam
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how about these two sentences?
  1. We have to blow up 50 balloons for the party
  2. We have to blow 50 balloons up for the party
does it make different meaning ?
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They're both okay by me, although I'm sure some would say number two should be avoided.
For some reason, "We have to blow 50 bridges up" sounds just fine. Perhaps it's okay because you can say "We have to blow 50 bridges," but you could not say, "we have to blow 50 balloons." That is "blow up" is idiomatic for balloons.

But, to answer your question, it does not
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thanks ..............

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