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Pleasehelp Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Mall

Hi,

Mall right across the street from where I live. Or

Mall right across the street to where I live.

They mean the same thing?

Thanks!
  

Top answer

pleasehelp Hi, Mall is right across the street from where I live . Or Mall right across the street to where I live. They mean the same thing?

  • pleasehelp Hi, Mall is right across the street from where I live .
  • Or Mall right across the street to where I live.
  • They mean the same thing?
  • Thanks!
  • You always need to put a verb in a sentence.
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8 Answers
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pleasehelpHi,

Mall is right across the street from where I live. Or

Mall right across the street to where I live.

They mean the same thing?

Thanks!

You always need to put a verb in a sentence.
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Sorry about the typo but are both sentences ok and mean the same thing?

Thanks!
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The second one is not correct
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Jhumjhum
pleasehelpHi,

Mall is right across the street from where I live. Or

Mall right across the street to where I live.

They mean the same thing?

Thanks!

You always need to put a verb in a sentence.

Don't forget the in
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So the sentence with to is incorrect?

Sounds right? No?
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I don't think it's right, definitely not. Emotion: smile

You could also say " A mall is across from where I live."( I just don't know if
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Sorry, I have to rephrase my sentence. Emotion: embarrassed

A mall is across from the street where I live.
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Most often you'd say:

"There's a mall across the street from where I live." -- If this is the first mention of the mall.

"The mall is across the street from where I live." -- If the listener knows that the mall exists but just doesn't know exactly where it is in relation to your house.

Note that "across the street from where I live" (which you wrote originally) is not

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