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Fire1 Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

To your question

?(After a man has given a question)

"Ok, to your question, I have something to talk about with you"


In this sentence, is "to your question" correct English?

  

Top answer

fire1 In this sentence, is "to your question" correct English? In your context it is possible in a sense like "now, to move on to the subject of your question". However, as with your other recent similar post, the sentence as a whole is not properly grammatical.

  • fire1 In this sentence, is "to your question" correct English?
  • In your context it is possible in a sense like "now, to move on to the subject of your question".
  • However, as with your other recent similar post, the sentence as a whole is not properly grammatical.
  • It might be encountered in informal spoken English, where people often speak in fragments and not in full sentences.
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1 Answers
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fire1In this sentence, is "to your question" correct English?

In your context it is possible in a sense like "now, to move on to the subject of your question". However, as with your other recent similar post, the sentence as a whole is not properly grammatical. It might be encountered in informal spoken English, where people often speak in fragments and not

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