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Silak12 Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Sorry to have you been?

Hye everyone in this sweet forum could you please tell me that, can i use these sentences, is it gramatical?

"sorry to have you been worrying for days"

"sorry to have you been worried"

"sorry to have worried you"

"sorry to have you muddled up"OR

"sory to have muddled you up" i am just asking that can i use "you " in every sentence after the verb (the past participle) like i did in the last sentence and in the third sentence? and also please tell me which of them are right? please i will be very great full

THANKS!
  

Top answer

"sorry to have you been worrying for days" No. "sorry to have you been worried" No. "sorry to have worried you" OK.

  • "sorry to have you been worrying for days" No.
  • "sorry to have you been worried" No.
  • "sorry to have worried you" OK.
  • "sorry to have you muddled up" No.
  • "sorry to have muddled you up" OK.
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2 Answers
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"sorry to have you been worrying for days" No.

"sorry to have you been worried" No.

"sorry to have worried you" OK.

"sorry to have you muddled up" No.

"sorry to have muddled you up" OK.

CJ
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Thanks my dear Sir!

you are really being kind to me

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