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Keenlearner Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Goes and going..!

Hello,

1:"I hope everything goes perfectly alright with you there."

2:"I hope everything is going perfectly alright with you there."

I need to know the difference between these two given above and please also tell me which one is more appropriate in different situations.I would be really grateful for your help.Emotion: smile

Thanks
  

Top answer

#1 means "goes all right in the future ". #2 means "is going all right now ". Although "alright" has its defenders, I personally loathe it and would always use "all right".

  • #1 means "goes all right in the future ".
  • #2 means "is going all right now ".
  • Although "alright" has its defenders, I personally loathe it and would always use "all right".
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3 Answers
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#1 means "goes all right in the future".

#2 means "is going all right now".

Although "alright" has its defenders, I personally loathe it and would always use "all right".
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#1. The person hopes that everything will go right at some time in the future. For example, "I hope that everything goes perfectly all right with you when you move into your new home."

#2. The person hopes that everything is going right at that moment. For example, "I hope that everything is going perfectly all right with your homework (at the moment)."

P.S. I ha
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Thank you Mr Wordy and hmea1,both of you were realy helpful to me and thanks for my correction.I hope I wont repeat my mistake and always write "all right" not "alright"

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