0
Bepleased Posted 15 years ago
Essay & Composition Writing

The meaning of [for you]

Hi,

Could any native right my ideas?

Thanks a lot in advance.

1.I've got follower for you. -----(of me) I 've got follower that is intended to be given to you.

2. They have bought some new chairs for the office. (of me) They have bought some new chairs that are intended to be given to the office.

3. Save some of the cake for her. ---(of me) Save some of the cake that is intended to belong to her.
  

Top answer

Hi, Could any native right my ideas? Thanks a lot in advance. I've got follower for you.

  • Hi, Could any native right my ideas?
  • Thanks a lot in advance.
  • I've got follower for you.
  • --(of me) I 've got follower that is intended to be given to you.
  • I've got a follower who is likely to want to follow you.
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.

3 Answers
0
Hi,

Could any native right my ideas?

Thanks a lot in advance.

1.I've got follower for you. --(of me) I 've got follower that is intended to be given to you.

I've got a follower who is likely to want to follow you.

A 'follower' is a person. We don't 'gi
0
Hi,

Thank you for it help me so much.

And the [follower] is misplaced in there; it ought to be [flower].

The sentence returns to : I've got flower for you. ----(of me) I've got flower that is intended to be given to you.

Could you tell me whether it's the right job?

Thank you for your telling again.
0
Hi,

And the [follower] is misplaced in there; it ought to be [flower].

The sentence returns to : I've got a flower for you. ----(of me) I've got a flower that is intended to be given to you.

Could you tell me whether it's the right job?

Related Questions