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Anonymous Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

I will get him tomorrow

Right now he is not at the home, so I will get him tomorrow.

Is the underlined sentence correct? I have written this sentence to mean so I will (call him) tomorrow.
  

Top answer

No, the idiom is a little off, I think. Try these: Right now he is not at the home, so I will get hold of / get in touch with him tomorrow.

  • No, the idiom is a little off, I think.
  • Try these: Right now he is not at the home, so I will get hold of / get in touch with him tomorrow.
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3 Answers
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No, the idiom is a little off, I think. Try these:

Right now he is not at the home, so I will get hold of / get in touch with him tomorrow.

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Mister MicawberNo, the idiom is a little off, I think. Try these:

Right now he is not at the home, so I will get hold of / get in touch with him tomorrow.

If I say (I will get in touch with him), what it means. i.e. (I will meet him physically tomorrow or "I will call him tomorrow")
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"Get in touch with" means communicate in some way - it could be phone, e-mail, etc. It actually has an implication that you will not talk to him in person.

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