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Anonymous Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Get up to

Hello.

I feel like there's nothing to get up to now that I don't have a job anymore.

I know it would be informal, but is this okay if I mean not that there's nothing to do, but that there's nothing to get up to as I don't have any plans scheduled for the day/nothing awaiting/nothing to get out of bed for? I could say "nothing to wake up for" but I feel that sounds too serious as the person speaking still got family and friends, he just don't got a job.

  

Top answer

anonymous I feel like there's nothing to get up to now that I don't have a job anymore. I feel like there's nothing to get up for now that I don't have a job. or I feel like there's no reason to get up now that I don't have a job.

  • anonymous I feel like there's nothing to get up to now that I don't have a job anymore.
  • I feel like there's nothing to get up for now that I don't have a job.
  • or I feel like there's no reason to get up now that I don't have a job.
  • or I feel like there's no reason to get out of bed now that I don't have a job.
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1 Answers
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anonymousI feel like there's nothing to get up to now that I don't have a job anymore.

I feel like there's nothing to get up for now that I don't have a job.

or

I feel like there's no reason to get up now that I don't have a job.

or

I feel like there's no reason to get out of bed now that I don't have a job.

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