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Iffi1991 Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

prepostion

yesterday i said to my friend "I don't think, I should habitual to tolerate you" ............ and he is correcting my mistake that the I should write I don't think, I should habitual of tolerate you instead of habitual to tolerate you............ according to me...... i should habitual is separate and to tolerate you is separate i did not use to as the preposition of habitual.... what do u say???
  

Top answer

iffi1991 what do u say??? I say that you both have speaking or writing problems. I can only suppose that this is what you meant: I don't think I can habitually tolerate you.

  • iffi1991 what do u say???
  • I say that you both have speaking or writing problems.
  • I can only suppose that this is what you meant: I don't think I can habitually tolerate you.
  • That at least follows the rules of grammar, though I am not sure that it is something a native would construct.
  • He would probably say (if I take your meaning): I don't think I can tolerate you any more.
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4 Answers
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iffi1991what do u say???
I say that you both have speaking or writing problems. I can only suppose that this is what you meant:

I don't think I can habitually tolerate you.

That at least follows the rules of grammar, though I am not sure that it is something a native would construct. He would probably say (if I take your meaning):
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sorry dear.... you did not understand my question.... i wish i could show you our conversation. but i can not.... Emotion: sad
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Please do not call me 'dear', iffi. That is quite rude (or homosexual when you are talking to a stranger of the same ***). You may use 'dear' with children and relatives.
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hahahaha sorry........ i didn't mean that Emotion: smile

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