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TreeView Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Is it correct

Nobody knows about my hard, painful travelling, from which I've got out. But I've just heard the voice again. Well, It's a start of mad game.
  

Top answer

Nobody knows about my hard, painful travelling, from which I've gotten out. But I've just heard the voice again. Well, i t's a start of a mad game.

  • Nobody knows about my hard, painful travelling, from which I've gotten out.
  • But I've just heard the voice again.
  • Well, i t's a start of a mad game.
  • I'm not sure what it means to get out from traveling.
  • Maybe it should be of which I've gotten out .
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5 Answers
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Nobody knows about my hard, painful travelling, from which I've gotten out. But I've just heard the voice again. Well, it's a start of a mad game.

I'm not sure what it means to get out from traveling. Maybe it should be of which I've gotten out. Do you mean to say that you are no longer traveling?
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Thanks for your answer. I'm trying to write a song. I wanted to say that it was unwanted travelling, and I escaped it. Yes, I wanted to say that I'm no longer traveling. How can I say it more correct?
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Hello Aspara Gus. I'd like to ask you a question about the use of got/gotten.

Did you change I've got to I've gotten because it is more common in AmE, or is it one of those situations where there is an exception.

Thanks.
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Nobody knows about my hard, painful travelling, from which I abandoned.
But I've just heard the voice again. Well, It's the start of the/a mad game.
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NugsoDid you change I've got to I've gotten because it is more common in AmE
Hi, Nugso,

Yes. In modern BrE, got is almost always used as the past participle of get, whereas in AmE, we use both got and gotten as participles, the latter used usually in the following kinds of contexts:

I've gotten taller since then

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