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Karen15 Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

I know appreciate / I appreciate

Hello,
This sentence was written by a native speaker: "I know appreciate her as a very relatable person"

I personally would say: "I appreciate her as a very relatable person"
I don't get what is "Know" stand for, and what is the difference between the meanings?

Thanks.
  

Top answer

"I know appreciate her as a very relatable person" This does not make sense. Are you sure the person did not write it this way? "

  • "I know appreciate her as a very relatable person" This does not make sense.
  • Are you sure the person did not write it this way?
  • "
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4 Answers
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"I know appreciate her as a very relatable person"
This does not make sense.
Are you sure the person did not write it this way?
"I know and appreciate her as a very relatable person."
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Clive"I know appreciate her as a very relatable person"This does not make sense.Are you sure the person did not write it this way?"I know and appreciate her as a very relatable person."
No. Because the audience know that he knows the person very well.
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Are your quotes and questions based on sentences you are reading in a blog?
Blog postings are very dubious sources of good English. They contain lots of mistakes and flubs.
Instead, use an edited source, such as articles from a newspaper or text from a published book.
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AlpheccaStarsAre your quotes and questions based on sentences you are reading in a blog? Blog postings are very dubious sources of good English. They contain lots of mistakes and flubs.Instead, use an edited source, such as articles from a newspaper or text from a published book.
It's true. Thank you so much for your suggestions.

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