0
Healer Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

On your way!

We say "on one's way" or "on the way" for the process of going somewhere.

I remember one can say "on your way" when one wants the listener to leave or take off. Am I correct?

  

Top answer

I remember one can say "on your way" when one wants the listener to leave or take off. Am I correct? Yes,but it's rude and offensive.

  • I remember one can say "on your way" when one wants the listener to leave or take off.
  • Am I correct?
  • Yes,but it's rude and offensive.
  • It's ordering someone to go way.
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

I remember one can say "on your way" when one wants the listener to leave or take off. Am I correct?

Yes,but it's rude and offensive. It's ordering someone to go way.

Related Questions