0
T2e Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

He wipes out his and Tommy's tears.

Both me and my friend are crying together. Then my friend controls his sadness. Then he wipes his and my tears.
Here, "he wipes his and my tears" is a valid statement?
Or it should be, "he wipes his and my tears".
Or it should be, "he wipes his tears, and then mine"? Which one of this a native speaker will use mostly?
  

Top answer

" This sounds more plausible. Trying to wipe two sets of eyes at the same time is hard to imagine.

  • " This sounds more plausible.
  • Trying to wipe two sets of eyes at the same time is hard to imagine.
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.

2 Answers
0
"He wipes his tears, and then mine." This sounds more plausible. Trying to wipe two sets of eyes at the same time is hard to imagine.
0
Both I and my friend are crying together.
He wipes away his and Tommy's tears.
t2e "he wipes his and my tears" is a valid statement?
Yes.
t2eOr it should be, "he wipes his and my tears".
That is the same.
t2eOr it should be, "he wipes his tears, and then mine"?

Related Questions