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Twilit02 Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

"He went down the aisle with a rich lady." And "He walked down the aisle with a rich lady."

...My dear and respected teachers,

1: "He went down the aisle with a rich lady." And "He walked down the aisle with a rich lady." Is it correct to say or I should remove "with a rich lady"?

2: "Let's get started." Why is 'get' used?

3: "Write the names of the days in a week." correct
  

Top answer

" Is it correct to say or I should remove "with a rich lady"? These are fine. The difference between the two is: to walk with, to run with, to travel with, places the emphasis on both of you performing the activity.

  • " Is it correct to say or I should remove "with a rich lady"?
  • These are fine.
  • The difference between the two is: to walk with, to run with, to travel with, places the emphasis on both of you performing the activity.
  • " To go somewhere with X emphasizes that you're the actor, in the company of the other person.
  • It's a very small distinction.
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1 Answers
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twilit02 1: "He went down the aisle with a rich lady." And "He walked down the aisle with a rich lady." Is it correct to say or I should remove "with a rich lady"? These are fine. The difference between the two is: to walk with, to run with, to travel with, places the emphasis on both of you performing the activity. "I played tennis with Jane."
To go somewhe

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