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Yogi2005 Posted 21 years ago
Vocabulary

It's crazy for me.

Hello,

A friend of mine takes English classes, his teacher is British. The teacher corrected my friend when he said "It's crazy for me". According to the teacher the phrase should be "I think it's crazy".

I found on the internet "It's crazy for me" as well as the phrase "It's crazy to me". I don't know the context in which me friend used the phrase.

Anyway,

could you tell me , please, what's wrong with "it's crazy for/to me"?
Could I have some comments on that?

Thank you in advance,
  

Top answer

Hi Yogi2005, I think it's crazy is ok but I think the best option is It's driving me crazy. Savvy

  • Hi Yogi2005, I think it's crazy is ok but I think the best option is It's driving me crazy.
  • Savvy
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2 Answers
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Hi Yogi2005,

I think it's crazy is ok but I think the best option is It's driving me crazy.

Savvy
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I think it's crazy is ok but I think the best option is It's driving me crazy.

These are both fine sentences but their meanings are quite different. "It's crazy for me" is not a natural-sounding sentence in English, and I'm not sure which meaning was intended. "I think it's crazy" means

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