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Wonder123 Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

fond

I'm fond of dogs.
I'm fond of drinking juice.
I'm fond of having friendship with good people.

What exactly fond mean? and does it used in a right way in the above sentence?
  

Top answer

` 'I'm fond of' means 'I like'. Your sentences are OK if you pluralise 'friendships'.

  • ` 'I'm fond of' means 'I like'.
  • Your sentences are OK if you pluralise 'friendships'.
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2 Answers
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`
'I'm fond of' means 'I like'.

Your sentences are OK if you pluralise 'friendships'.

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