0
HSS Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

Join (Up on) You.

Hi.

I'm just curious to know if there is any difference between

[1] I'll join you,

[2] I'll join on you,

and

[3] I'll join up on you

?

Any and all your help would be very much appreciated.

Hiro

  

Top answer

i know that, to use "join", you should say A join B but for "join up", you should say A and B join up. however, i haven't ever seen "join on" ..

  • i know that, to use "join", you should say A join B but for "join up", you should say A and B join up.
  • however, i haven't ever seen "join on" ..
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
i know that, to use "join", you should say A join B
but for "join up", you should say A and B join up.
however, i haven't ever seen "join on" ..
0
2 and 3 are kind of strange to me, but I've found several instance of 3) on the Web.

However, the established usage is:
--------
Phrasal Verb: join up

To enlist as a member of an armed service.

Phrasal Verb: join up with someone

To come together with them for joint action

Related Questions