0
Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Get off to a good start

"Get off to a good start"
I think "get off from a good start" is logically correct or is there a reason there is the to? Thank you so much as usual and have a good day.
  

Top answer

Anonymous "Get off to a good start" This is a set phrase, and a rather common one. Anonymous I think "get off from a good start" is logically correct It is not very logical to me.

  • Anonymous "Get off to a good start" This is a set phrase, and a rather common one.
  • Anonymous I think "get off from a good start" is logically correct It is not very logical to me.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
Anonymous"Get off to a good start"
This is a set phrase, and a rather common one.
AnonymousI think "get off from a good start" is logically correct
It is not very logical to me.
0
Thank you so much and to means towards here?
0
AnonymousThank you so much and to means towards here?
The dictionary has better choices:

TO:
6. (used for expressing aim, purpose, or intention): going to the rescue.
9. (used for expressing a resulting state or condition): He tore it to pieces.
20. (used for indicating the indirect object of a verb, for connectin

Related Questions