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Anonymous Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

In or Into

When I can't remember something, can I say:
"I can't get it back in my head" or should I say "I cant get it back into my head"?

Thanks!
  

Top answer

Neither of those is a known expression (not to me, anyway).

  • Neither of those is a known expression (not to me, anyway).
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3 Answers
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Neither of those is a known expression (not to me, anyway).
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Here are two common sayings:

It's slipped my mind.
It's on the tip of my tongue.
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AnonymousWhen I can't remember something, can I say:"I can't get it back in my head" or should I say "I cant get it back into my head"?
No. You can't say either of those. Just say I can't remember or I've forgotten.

What you wrote is close to another, different expression which shows frustration at someone's not being able to learn or

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