0Teachers,02br 02br 00If you are to tell a person that he has aged, which of followings are colloquially correct to use?02br 02br 00You've gotten old./You have gotten old.02br 00You've got old./You have got old.02br 00You got old.02br 02br 00Similarly, you're with a friend discussing about someone else,02br 02br 00He's gotten old./He has gotten old.02br 00He's got old./He has gotten old./02br 00He got old.02br 02br 00Please help, thank you.0-
Top answer
0You've gotten old. Although this isn't the most polite thing to say. How about: 02br 00You've matured (with the years).
— Ganesh77
0You've gotten old.
Although this isn't the most polite thing to say.
How about: 02br 00You've matured (with the years).
0-
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.
0You've gotten old. Although this isn't the most polite thing to say. How about: 02br 00You've matured (with the years). 02br 00You've aged.02br 00You look older now.02br 00 Similarly when talking about a friend:02br 00S/he's gotten old.02br 00S/he's aged.02br 00S/he looks older now.0-
0Hi,02br 02br 00If you are telling at the moment how he has gotten old over the years, I think it is correct to say "He has gotten old." 02br 02br 00Like wise, if you are talking with your friends about the fact that he has gotten old over the years, I think it is correct to say the same thing, "He has gotten old."02br 02br 00I think it