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Vts nair Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

I have got him to reschedule the meeting

I have got the meeting rescheduled. Can anybody explain both of its meaning? Does both sentence give almost same meaning?
  

Top answer

Please put your full question in the body of the post. It is hard at first to understand what "both sentence" refers to because at this stage one is not looking at the subject line. My guess is that you are asking about these sentences: I have got the meeting rescheduled.

  • Please put your full question in the body of the post.
  • It is hard at first to understand what "both sentence" refers to because at this stage one is not looking at the subject line.
  • My guess is that you are asking about these sentences: I have got the meeting rescheduled.
  • I have got him to reschedule the meeting.
  • The second one refers specifically to one male person ("him") who effected the rescheduling under your instruction/persuasion.
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1 Answers
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Please put your full question in the body of the post. It is hard at first to understand what "both sentence" refers to because at this stage one is not looking at the subject line. My guess is that you are asking about these sentences:

I have got the meeting rescheduled.
I have got him to reschedule the meeting.

The second one refers specifically to one male pe

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