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Kooyeen Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

start starting getting started!

Hi,
forget the title, lol,

I'm getting confused.
I'm starting to get confused.


Are they ok? Is there any difference in meaning between the first and the second? Thanks Emotion: smile
  

Top answer

"start to get confused" emphasizes that you are in the initial stages of "getting confused".

  • "start to get confused" emphasizes that you are in the initial stages of "getting confused".
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1 Answers
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"start to get confused" emphasizes that you are in the initial stages of "getting confused".

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