0
Belly Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

To be worried and worry

I have two sentences:

I'm worried about my son's safety. He's always going out with thugs.

I worry about my son's safety.He's always going out with thugs.

What's the differences between them?
  

Top answer

No real difference, I think. The first states the speaker's condition; the second states the speaker's activity-- two sides of the same coin.

  • No real difference, I think.
  • The first states the speaker's condition; the second states the speaker's activity-- two sides of the same coin.
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2 Answers
0
No real difference, I think. The first states the speaker's condition; the second states the speaker's activity-- two sides of the same coin.
0
I also think that there is no difference.

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