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John Chen Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

lunch word order

Gonna go to the gym after lunch in the afternoon.

Gonna go to the gym in the afternoon after lunch.

Are these the same?

Do the first one mean going to the gym in the afternoon? Or lunch in the afternoon?

I'm try to say: Go to gym in the afternoon after lunch.
  

Top answer

John Chen Gonna go to the gym after lunch in the afternoon. Are these the same? They are both wrong in the sense that we do not write 'gonna'.

  • John Chen Gonna go to the gym after lunch in the afternoon.
  • Are these the same?
  • They are both wrong in the sense that we do not write 'gonna'.
  • It is not a word, but a pseudo-phonetic representation of the spoken phrase 'going to'.
  • I'm going to go to the gym after lunch in the afternoon.
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3 Answers
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John ChenGonna go to the gym after lunch in the afternoon. Gonna go to the gym in the afternoon after lunch.Are these the same?
They are both wrong in the sense that we do not write 'gonna'. It is not a word, but a pseudo-phonetic representation of the spoken phrase 'going to'.

I'm going to go to the gym after lunch in the afternoon.
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Mister Micawber John ChenGonna go to the gym after lunch in the afternoon. Gonna go to the gym in the afternoon after lunch.Are these the same?They are both wrong in the sense that we do not write 'gonna'. It is not a word, but a pseudo-phonetic representation of the spoken phrase 'going to'.I'm going to go to the gym after lunch in the afternoon.I'm going to go to the gy
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John ChenI'm trying to say that we are going to go to the gym after lunch with as little few words as possible.
The forget the 'going to go', and remember that 'after lunch' is normally after noon.

I'm going to the gym after lunch.

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