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Fire1 Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

On to your question vs onto your question

?Are both "On to your question" and "Onto your question" the same thing in meaning and correct English expressions like in the case below?


...And on to your question, I need someone to solve it with.

...And onto your question, I need someone to solve it with.

  

Top answer

Neither of your sentences is possible. Maybe you were thinking of "as to". The choice betwen "on to" and "onto" is a logical one you have to make each time it arises.

  • Neither of your sentences is possible.
  • Maybe you were thinking of "as to".
  • The choice betwen "on to" and "onto" is a logical one you have to make each time it arises.
  • Use "on to" when "on" belongs with the verb.
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2 Answers
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Neither of your sentences is possible. Maybe you were thinking of "as to".

The choice betwen "on to" and "onto" is a logical one you have to make each time it arises. Use "on to" when "on" belongs with the verb.

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It should be "on to". However, it is not a fully grammatical sentence. The first part is not properly grammatically connected to the second part.

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