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Hans51 Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Look at yourself / you

The meaning of 'look at you' is that 'we or I look at you' or 'you look at yourself'? Or is there a meaning difference between look at yourself and look at you?

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Top answer

Hans51 Or is there a meaning difference between look at yourself and look at you? As an imperative, 'Look at you/yourself' can only be synonymous, since the implied subject is 'you'. If you have another kind of sentence in mind, please supply an example.

  • Hans51 Or is there a meaning difference between look at yourself and look at you?
  • As an imperative, 'Look at you/yourself' can only be synonymous, since the implied subject is 'you'.
  • If you have another kind of sentence in mind, please supply an example.
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3 Answers
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Hans51 Or is there a meaning difference between look at yourself and look at you?
As an imperative, 'Look at you/yourself' can only be synonymous, since the implied subject is 'you'. If you have another kind of sentence in mind, please supply an example.
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Look at you! You are such a pretty lady!

Here Look at you is an imperative? Or is there another meaning?

Thank you so much.
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Hans51Here Look at you is an imperative?
It is, but it is rhetorical.

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