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Teal lime Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Stay with someone

If you stay with someone, does it mean that you have a relationship with that person?

Thank you

  

Top answer

It depends on the context and what you mean by 'relationship'. We are talking to each other on here therefore have a 'relationship' of sorts; if you're referring to a more meaningful relationship, I don't think that staying with someone implies that. You can stay with someone - sleeping on their floor, for example - and just be an acquaintance of them.

  • It depends on the context and what you mean by 'relationship'.
  • We are talking to each other on here therefore have a 'relationship' of sorts; if you're referring to a more meaningful relationship, I don't think that staying with someone implies that.
  • You can stay with someone - sleeping on their floor, for example - and just be an acquaintance of them.
  • If you said you were 'living' with someone, that would certainly imply you were in a relationship with them.
  • If you are living in the same house as someone but were not in a relationship with them, you would probably say you 'share a house' with them or 'live in the same house' as them.
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1 Answers
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It depends on the context and what you mean by 'relationship'.

We are talking to each other on here therefore have a 'relationship' of sorts; if you're referring to a more meaningful relationship, I don't think that staying with someone implies that.

You can stay with someone - sleeping on their floor, for example - and just be an acquaintance of them. If you said you were 'living

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