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Victor_amelkin Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Wipe on/with

Could you please suggest which of the following

variants is grammatically correct?

1) wipe one's hands with a towel

2) wipe one's hands on a towel

My dictionary suggests #2, though I encounter #1

on the Internet from time to time, and #1 is more

natural for me.

Thanks in advance.

--

Victor
  

Top answer

1) wipe one's hands with a towel 2) wipe one's hands on a towel They're both correct, but some might say that the processes they describe are a bit different. The implication is that one thing moves while the other is stationary. Of course that's not always exactly true.

  • 1) wipe one's hands with a towel 2) wipe one's hands on a towel They're both correct, but some might say that the processes they describe are a bit different.
  • The implication is that one thing moves while the other is stationary.
  • Of course that's not always exactly true.
  • If you wipe your nose on your sleeve, you hold your arm still and move your head back and forth.
  • If you wipe your nose with your sleeve, you hold your head still, and move your arm back and forth.
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1 Answers
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1) wipe one's hands with a towel

2) wipe one's hands on a towel


They're both correct, but some might say that the processes they describe are a bit different.

The implication is that one thing moves while the other is stationary. Of course that's not always exactly true.

If you wip

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