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Jandi Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

I want you out of here.

0 Hello, teachers! 02br
02br
00- I want you out of here. 02br
02br
00Which does this mean? Are both possible according to context? 02br
001. I want you to get out of here. 02br
002. I want to see or talk to you out of here. 02br
02br
00Thank you very much. 0-
  

Top answer

0 Jandi, 02br 02br 00Both are possible in the right context; however, the second is far, far less likely an interpretation. It would have to be said in exactly the right tone of voice in the right context to communicate that meaning. 02br 02br 00CJ 0-

  • 0 Jandi, 02br 02br 00Both are possible in the right context; however, the second is far, far less likely an interpretation.
  • It would have to be said in exactly the right tone of voice in the right context to communicate that meaning.
  • 02br 02br 00CJ 0-
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3 Answers
0
0 Jandi, 02br
02br
00Both are possible in the right context; however, the second is far, far less likely an interpretation. It would have to be said in exactly the right tone of voice in the right context to communicate that meaning. 02br
02br
00CJ 0-
0
0 Thanks, great teacher. 02br
00Enjoy the bright sunshine! 0-
0
0 See: "The Graduate" watch for the Berkeley Dorm scenes. You will get the quintessential 02br
00use of the phrase "I want you out of here" 0-

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