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Messier42 Posted 13 years ago
Vocabulary

Which one is proper? And How they are different?

I honked to get the car in front to move a bit forward.
I honked to make the car in front move a bit forward.
I honked to have the car in front move a bit forward.
I honked to have the car in front to moved a bit forward.
  

Top answer

Please put your entire question in the body of your post even if it is already in the title. When I am looking for posts to answer, I cannot see the entire title line, so the body often reads like nonsense if the question is not there, too. All your sentences seem to refer to the first car in the line of cars you are in.

  • Please put your entire question in the body of your post even if it is already in the title.
  • When I am looking for posts to answer, I cannot see the entire title line, so the body often reads like nonsense if the question is not there, too.
  • All your sentences seem to refer to the first car in the line of cars you are in.
  • I suspect that this is not what you mean.
  • I think you mean the car right in front of your car, so I would put "of me" in there.
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3 Answers
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Please put your entire question in the body of your post even if it is already in the title. When I am looking for posts to answer, I cannot see the entire title line, so the body often reads like nonsense if the question is not there, too.

All your sentences seem to refer to the first car in the line of cars you are in. I suspect that this is not what you mean. I think you mean the car r
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Thank you.
to get someone to do
to make someone to do
to have someone to do

How are they different?
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To get someone to do something is either to persuade them to do it or to hire them to do it.

To make someone to do something is to force them to do it.

To have someone to do something is to select someone to do it.

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