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Mitsuo23 Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Make fun of me without "of"

Hi,

The sentences below are from a movie script, and I would like to know if this kind of grammar is spoken in reality. (I think it is grammatically incorrect)

A: Then, this story should be right up your alley.
B: So, tell us.
A: Promise you won't make fun me.

Thanks,
M
  

Top answer

mitsuwao23 A: Then, this story should be right up your alley. B: So, tell us. A: Promise you won't make fun me.

  • mitsuwao23 A: Then, this story should be right up your alley.
  • B: So, tell us.
  • A: Promise you won't make fun me.
  • It's all realistic except the at the end.
  • It's "make fun of me", never "make fun me".
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2 Answers
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mitsuwao23A: Then, this story should be right up your alley.
B: So, tell us.
A: Promise you won't make fun me.
It's all realistic except the at the end. It's "make fun of me", never "make fun me".

CJ
0
Thank you for the reply, CJ.
M

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