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Anonymous Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Explain the difference of these sentences

"Who are you with?" and "Who you are with?"
or either one is wrong?
  

Top answer

Yes, the second one is wrong. When you have a question, you change the order of the subject and the verb, as you have in the first one.

  • Yes, the second one is wrong.
  • When you have a question, you change the order of the subject and the verb, as you have in the first one.
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2 Answers
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Yes, the second one is wrong.

When you have a question, you change the order of the subject and the verb, as you have in the first one.
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Only the first one has the correct word order for a question.
.

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