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Johnson13 Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

dont' mind me

context: now near the time for a formal hall dinner, which we, students of the whole college, have to attend, and we are required to dress, but my roommate sees I still haven't; if I want to tell him 'don't mind me/I'll sort it out etc.' (?because I don't think these two things are idiomatic English, though maybe understandable), what can I say?
  

Top answer

whatever you think you should say

  • whatever you think you should say
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2 Answers
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whatever you think you should say
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Don't mind me is commonly said as an apology when you are doing something that may bother someone else.

In your context, I might say Don't worry about me, meaning 'It's my problem, not your problem, so let me deal with it in my way'.

Clive

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