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Yellowstarstruck Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

The verb "go"

I go to school at 7.
Does go mean in this case the time you arrive at school or the time you leave from your home to go to school?
Cheers Fulvio!
  

Top answer

yellowstarstruck Does go mean in this case the time you arrive at school or the time you leave from your home to go to school? You don't present a case, Fulvio—just an isolated sentence which could have either meaning.

  • yellowstarstruck Does go mean in this case the time you arrive at school or the time you leave from your home to go to school?
  • You don't present a case, Fulvio—just an isolated sentence which could have either meaning.
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3 Answers
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yellowstarstruckDoes go mean in this case the time you arrive at school or the time you leave from your home to go to school?
You don't present a case, Fulvio—just an isolated sentence which could have either meaning.
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Your sentence is ambiguous.
You need one of these:

I leave for school at 7.
Classes begin at at 7.
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It's an interesting question though. I never thought of it.

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