0
Arline de jong Posted 22 years ago
Grammar

To involve

Could you explain me the difference between involved with and involved in?
  

Top answer

Let's try: you can be involved with something (devoted to an activity or interest) involved with somebody (to have a serious relationship) or involved in something (taking part in a situation, implicated in a problem, a scandal, an accident)

  • Let's try: you can be involved with something (devoted to an activity or interest) involved with somebody (to have a serious relationship) or involved in something (taking part in a situation, implicated in a problem, a scandal, an accident)
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.

1 Answers
0
Let's try:

you can be
involved with something (devoted to an activity or interest)
involved with somebody (to have a serious relationship)

or
involved in something (taking part in a situation, implicated in a problem, a scandal, an accident)

Related Questions