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Alexey86 Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Don't have to in context

Hi, everybody! Could you check, please, whether i've found the right context for the sentence below:
You don't have to stand here. -> context: the speaker is a boss, and the listener is his worker; the boss means it's not necessary for the worker to stand in the workplace and allows him to sit.

  

Top answer

That's not wrong, but more natural is eg You don't have to stand up all the time.

  • That's not wrong, but more natural is eg You don't have to stand up all the time.
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1 Answers
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That's not wrong, but more natural is eg You don't have to stand up all the time.

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