0
Writingtosms Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

Mom is calling you "here"

Hi

Request you to consider this situation: My mom and sister are shopping in shop #1 and I am in shop #20.

I receive a phone call from my sister asking, "Where are you? Mom is calling you here."

In other words, mom wants me to come to shop #1.

I'd like to know if the Mom is calling you here part is grammatically correct and apt for this situation.

Please help.


Thank you

  

Top answer

writingtosms I'd like to know if the Mom is calling you here part is grammatically correct and apt for this situation. It's grammatical, but it does not say what you mean. "Calling" in that meaning is rather literary, and we usually are referring instead to a phone call.

  • writingtosms I'd like to know if the Mom is calling you here part is grammatically correct and apt for this situation.
  • It's grammatical, but it does not say what you mean.
  • "Calling" in that meaning is rather literary, and we usually are referring instead to a phone call.
  • "
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.

1 Answers
0
writingtosmsI'd like to know if the Mom is calling you here part is grammatically correct and apt for this situation.

It's grammatical, but it does not say what you mean. "Calling" in that meaning is rather literary, and we usually are referring instead to a phone call. There are a lot of ways to put what you want to say, maybe "Mom wants you here" or "Mom

Related Questions