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Anonymous Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

"Tu love Nhung" or "Tu loves Nhung"?

I'm discussing this sentence with my friends. Tu and Nhung are Vietnamese names like any other name in the world.

Obviously, "Tu loves Nhung" is correct if it's from a third person.

But if Tu tells Nhung directly that "Tu love Nhung" like "I love you", does "love" get an "s" here?

Some of my friends think in this case, "Tu" is same as "I", therefore it doesn't need to have "s".

But I don't think so.

Please help us. Thank you very much.

  

Top answer

anonymous But if Tu tells Nhung directly that "Tu love Nhung" like "I love you", does "love" get an "s" here? It's completely irrelevant whether Tu or someone else says that sentence--you still need an s at the end.

  • anonymous But if Tu tells Nhung directly that "Tu love Nhung" like "I love you", does "love" get an "s" here?
  • It's completely irrelevant whether Tu or someone else says that sentence--you still need an s at the end.
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2 Answers
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anonymousBut if Tu tells Nhung directly that "Tu love Nhung" like "I love you", does "love" get an "s" here?

It's completely irrelevant whether Tu or someone else says that sentence--you still need an s at the end.

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anonymous"Tu love Nhung"

Oh no!.

There were movies of Tarzan the Ape man made in the 1930s. Jane was an English girl who was lost in the jungle and rescued by the strong, gentle Tarzan. Tarzan, who had been rescued as a baby by an ape family, did not speak any language. Jane tried to teach him English. After a while, Tarzan could say these:

"M

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