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Andrei Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

In on

0I don't know the ins and outs of the company. 02br
02br
00I have heard the above and I would use it to say that I don't know inner details/activities of the company. 02br
02br
00My colleague suggested the following too: 02br
02br
00I wasn't in on all comapany's plans. 02br
02br
00Would you write the above to say that you don't know the inner details/activities of the company? 02br
02br
00I haven't learned to write 'in on' as yet. 02br
02br
00I have learned to write 'cash in on' to take advantage of something. 0-
  

Top answer

0 "to know the ins and outs of sth" is an idiom meaning to have detailed and intimate knowledge of something. 12blockquote 12br 02br 00yes, I think you could. It means that you don't know everything there is to know.

  • 0 "to know the ins and outs of sth" is an idiom meaning to have detailed and intimate knowledge of something.
  • 12blockquote 12br 02br 00yes, I think you could.
  • It means that you don't know everything there is to know.
  • 02br 02br 0-
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3 Answers
0
0 "to know the ins and outs of sth" is an idiom meaning to have detailed and intimate knowledge of something. 02br
02br
00Andrei knows the ins and outs of mathematics 02br
02br
00(Andrei knows everything about mathematics) 02br
01blockquote
00Would you write the above to say that you don't know the inner details/activities of the
0
0 I was not all in on abbie's future plans. 02br
02br
00So the above is grammatically correct. 0-
0
0 01blockquote
00I was not all in on abbie's future plans12blockquote
12br
02br
00I was not in on .... 02br
02br
00(no all) You're getting the hang of this, Andrei! 0-

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