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Angliholic Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

washes/does the dishes

Missy tells Daniel that she will help him if he does/washes the dishes for the next month. And Daniel agrees to/on/with the deal.

Do all of the underlined words fit in the above and convey the same idea? Thanks.
  

Top answer

Hi Missy tells Daniel that she will help him if he does/washes both are OK the dishes for the next month. And Daniel agrees to/on/with the deal. 'to' is best, 'with' is OK, 'on' is not so good here Clive

  • Hi Missy tells Daniel that she will help him if he does/washes both are OK the dishes for the next month.
  • And Daniel agrees to/on/with the deal.
  • 'to' is best, 'with' is OK, 'on' is not so good here Clive
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4 Answers
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Hi

Missy tells Daniel that she will help him if he does/washes both are OK the dishes for the next month. And Daniel agrees to/on/with the deal. 'to' is best, 'with' is OK, 'on' is not so good here

Clive
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CliveHi

Missy tells Daniel that she will help him if he does/washes both are OK the dishes for the next month. And Daniel agrees to/on/with the deal. 'to' is best, 'with' is OK, 'on' is not so good here

Clive

Thanks, Clive.

Could you explain more on the "agree to/on/with" part? Wha
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Hi,

And Daniel agrees to/on/with the deal. 'to' is best, 'with' is OK, 'on' is not so good here

Could you explain more on the "agree to/on/with" part? What are the subtle differences among them?

Sometimes, no difference in meaning is intended. However, here are a few comments on subtleties.

agree to If I agree t
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