0
Napoleonponapa Posted 17 years ago
Vocabulary

What is the different uses of " here you are, here you go and there you go"

If I hand something to somebody, I can " here you go" and " here you are".

so, is " here you go" and " here you are" the same meaning? any other use of them apart from the above context?

What does it mean by " there you go"? In what situation do we use this phrase?

Thank a lot
  

Top answer

Here you go I have it in my hand and I'm presenting it to you. / Thank you. Here you are Same as "Here you go," but more polite.

  • Here you go I have it in my hand and I'm presenting it to you.
  • / Thank you.
  • Here you are Same as "Here you go," but more polite.
  • There you go I have finished presenting it to you; you now have it.
  • / Thank you.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

4 Answers
0
Here you go I have it in my hand and I'm presenting it to you. / Thank you.

Here you are Same as "Here you go," but more polite.

There you go I have finished presenting it to you; you now have it. / Thank you.

Also, now less common: (casual - in response to a remark - possibly hume
0
Thank you very much, Avangi. [F]

And how about "Here we go"? Is it the same as "Let's go"?

Best regards,

Ngoc Tuyet

0
It can be as you say.

But it's also sometimes used sarcastically - like Reagan's debate with Mondale, "There you go again!"

Someone is spouting off to a group about his favorite subject, which most of the group are really sick of hearing about.

So somebody says, "Oh, here we go [again]." This means, "We've been down this road before."
0
Thank you very much [again]. Emotion: stick out tongue[F]

Related Questions