0
Teal lime Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Get someone to do something or get someone into doing somtething?

Is it "to get someone to do something" or "to get someone into doing something"? If both are possible, do they mean the same thing?

If not, when should I use each of them?

Would you please give me some examples?

Thank you

  

Top answer

teal lime Is it "to get someone to do something" or "to get someone into doing something"? to get someone to do something is the standard form. I've never seen or heard the other one, and I don't recommend that you use it, but let me know if you have an example.

  • teal lime Is it "to get someone to do something" or "to get someone into doing something"?
  • to get someone to do something is the standard form.
  • I've never seen or heard the other one, and I don't recommend that you use it, but let me know if you have an example.
  • CJ
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.

1 Answers
0
teal limeIs it "to get someone to do something" or "to get someone into doing something"?

to get someone to do something is the standard form.

I've never seen or heard the other one, and I don't recommend that you use it, but let me know if you have an example.

CJ

Related Questions