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Park sang joon Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

When I see you, () I see your brother

The following comes from one of my English reference book.
1. When I see you, I see your brother.

I'd like to know if "it looks like" is implied before " I see your brother."
Thank you in advance for your help.
  

Top answer

Dear Park, You are more or less right. The two brothers look so similar to the speaker that the brother he or she is looking at reminds him of the other brother. Perhaps the speaker is more familiar with the other brother.

  • Dear Park, You are more or less right.
  • The two brothers look so similar to the speaker that the brother he or she is looking at reminds him of the other brother.
  • Perhaps the speaker is more familiar with the other brother.
  • Kind regards, Michael
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1 Answers
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Dear Park,

You are more or less right. The two brothers look so similar to the speaker that the brother he or she is looking at reminds him of the other brother. Perhaps the speaker is more familiar with the other brother.

Kind regards,

Michael

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