0
Anonymous Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

I'm worried about/for you.

I'm worried about/for you, Mark.


As I understand it "about" is much more common but also a bit unclear as it could mean both that the speaker is worried that something will happen to Mark or that he will do something that might harm other people.

If the speaker is concerned that something will happen to Mark, would you use "about" despite it could be unclear?

  

Top answer

anonymous If the speaker is concerned that something will happen to Mark, would you use "about" despite it could be unclear? Yes, I would. The context will make the exact meaning clear.

  • anonymous If the speaker is concerned that something will happen to Mark, would you use "about" despite it could be unclear?
  • Yes, I would.
  • The context will make the exact meaning clear.
  • CJ
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
anonymousIf the speaker is concerned that something will happen to Mark, would you use "about" despite it could be unclear?

Yes, I would. The context will make the exact meaning clear.

CJ

Related Questions