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Wangqh2696122 Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

"walk out of" and "walk out from"

Are both of the following correct? What's the difference between "walk out of" and "walk out from"?

I was really disappointed and about to leave when he walked out of a building.

I was really disappointed and about to leave when he walked out from a building.
  

Top answer

wangqh2696122 I was really disappointed and about to leave when he walked out of a building. This one is certainly correct and natural. The other is OK, but it is not as common.

  • wangqh2696122 I was really disappointed and about to leave when he walked out of a building.
  • This one is certainly correct and natural.
  • The other is OK, but it is not as common.
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1 Answers
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wangqh2696122I was really disappointed and about to leave when he walked out of a building.
This one is certainly correct and natural.

The other is OK, but it is not as common.

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