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Salam1101 Posted 22 years ago
Grammar

Go talk

Hello
''I'll go talk to her.''
I'm wondering if using two verbs side by side (go talk) is grammatically correct.
Thanks in advance
  

Top answer

In American English it is informal but correct. After all, if 'go and do' is correct, we might as well go whole hog and say 'go do'. It only works with 'go' and 'come' though.

  • In American English it is informal but correct.
  • After all, if 'go and do' is correct, we might as well go whole hog and say 'go do'.
  • It only works with 'go' and 'come' though.
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4 Answers
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In American English it is informal but correct. After all, if 'go and do' is correct, we might as well go whole hog and say 'go do'. It only works with 'go' and 'come' though.
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The "GO DO SOMETHING" Family of Colloquial Expressions

There are several variants of "go do" in American English. All are used informally in conversation, and almost never in formal writing.

In the following discussion, the verb "do" stands for any verb, but the list of verbs normally used with this construction in everyday conversation is not very long.

Probably th
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Hello CJ and Salam

['Go' + imperative] also appears in some of the older English poets.

Alexander Pope (C18) seems to have been especially addicted to it:

'Go, measure earth, weigh air, and state the tides...'
'Go, soar with Plato to th'empyreal sphere...'
'Go, teach Eternal Wisdom how to rule...'

—3 examples, from a page chosen at random.

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