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Angliholic Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

I just have a lot on my mind.

I just have a lot on my mind.

Does the above indicate "I just have many things to worry about," "I just feel very worried," and "I'm just worried about many things?" Thanks.
  

Top answer

You may not actually be worried. You may just be thinking about it a lot. Planning, making arrangements, etc

  • You may not actually be worried.
  • You may just be thinking about it a lot.
  • Planning, making arrangements, etc
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3 Answers
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You may not actually be worried. You may just be thinking about it a lot. Planning, making arrangements, etc
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Grammar GeekYou may not actually be worried. You may just be thinking about it a lot. Planning, making arrangements, etc

Right. The things you are thinking about, that you have on your mind, could easily be of a positive nature.
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Philip
Grammar Geek
You may not actually be worried. You may just be thinking about it a lot. Planning, making arrangements, etc

Right. The things you are thinking about, that you have on your mind, could easily be of a positive nature.
Thanks, GG and Philip.

Gotcha.

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