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Anonymous Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Help in?

Dear Teachers,

I know that the structure "help someone with English"/"help someone with his/her English" is right, but how about "help someone in English" to say that the person is getting help with his-her knowledge of English? Is that correct as well? Could you tell me, please? Thanks.

  

Top answer

anonymous how about "help someone in English" to say that the person is getting help with his-her knowledge of English? Is that correct as well? That is OK, too, though open to misunderstanding: they could be helping by speaking only English.

  • anonymous how about "help someone in English" to say that the person is getting help with his-her knowledge of English?
  • Is that correct as well?
  • That is OK, too, though open to misunderstanding: they could be helping by speaking only English.
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1 Answers
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anonymoushow about "help someone in English" to say that the person is getting help with his-her knowledge of English? Is that correct as well?

That is OK, too, though open to misunderstanding: they could be helping by speaking only English.

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