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Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Into / in to

Hello everybody,

I was wondering about the usage of "into" and "in to" in this particular context.
I bought a book last week and on the cover it says:

"[...] stimulating ways in to new subjects."
Here's a link: http://informationr.net/ir/reviews/revs385.html

Isn't it supposed to be "into new subjects"?

Eagerly waiting for your suggestions!
Thank you in advance!
  

Top answer

Our Lithuanian friend messed up. It is "into" in the original.

  • Our Lithuanian friend messed up.
  • It is "into" in the original.
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2 Answers
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Our Lithuanian friend messed up. It is "into" in the original.
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enoonOur Lithuanian friend messed up.
I do not think that she messed up here since she copied the exact wording which is also used on the cover of my book. It says "in to", but I guessed it was a mistake. So apparently the publishers messed up ;-)

Thanks for your fast response!

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