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Hans51 Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

To your success!

To your success!

I know that 'to something' is a common expression native English speakers use a lot while drinking.
When Koreans translate it from English into Korean, it sounds like 'for something' 'for your success!' in Korean, so I was wondering if 'to' here is used to mean 'for' or it is a short version of something or what is a meaning of 'to' here?

I know that my questions are sometimes so weird but I really would like to find out easy ways of learning English and difference between each language,so please help me out again.

Thank you so much as always and have a good day.
  

Top answer

It is often rather pointless to try to figure out what one particular word means in a phrase. It's better to learn and remember the phrase as it is. What does 'every' mean in this sentence: I see him every now and then .

  • It is often rather pointless to try to figure out what one particular word means in a phrase.
  • It's better to learn and remember the phrase as it is.
  • What does 'every' mean in this sentence: I see him every now and then .
  • I don't know.
  • CB
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1 Answers
0
It is often rather pointless to try to figure out what one particular word means in a phrase. It's better to learn and remember the phrase as it is. What does 'every' mean in this sentence: I see him every now and then. I don't know.

CB

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