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Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Which prepositions is correct?

Which prepositions is correct?
Would you rephrase the sentence or is it sound?

I just saw a whole different side to -of you I didn't know of -about by just working with you. Now that we have seen each other outside of work, I see you differently.
  

Top answer

Anonymous I just saw a whole different side to -of you I didn't know of -about by just working with you. Now that we have seen each other outside of work, I see you differently. I just saw a whole different side of you, (a side)(one) I didn't know just (by)(from) working with you.

  • Anonymous I just saw a whole different side to -of you I didn't know of -about by just working with you.
  • Now that we have seen each other outside of work, I see you differently.
  • I just saw a whole different side of you, (a side)(one) I didn't know just (by)(from) working with you.
  • Now that we have seen each other outside of work, I see you differently.
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2 Answers
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AnonymousI just saw a whole different side to -of you I didn't know of -about by just working with you. Now that we have seen each other outside of work, I see you differently.
I just saw a whole different side of you, (a side)(one) I didn't know just (by)(from) working with you. Now that we have seen each other outside of work, I see you dif
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canadian45I just saw a whole different side of you, (a side)(one) I didn't know
As a speaker of British English, I would be just as likely to use 'to'. I agree that we need either 'a sise' or 'one'. I think it's possible to use 'of' after 'know'.
canadian45(a side)(one) I didn't know just (by)(from) working with you.

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