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WilliamDeWorde
1 year ago

You tipped yourself. At 2. it must be:
“That’s why I never go play with them.”

You can say both, but 1. is better.

At 2. you say you’re going, but not playing, but maybe shopping.

WwernerR363
1 year ago

Your sentences are both possible!

Then there are two different meanings of “you” depending on whether you write it big or small! If you write “it” small, you mean, for example, a plurality of people (with the doofen guys from the neighboring house).)

If you’re big, you mean a person you’re winning! “With you, Mr. XY…!”

JMC01
1 year ago

Version 1 is correct. In version 2 the subject (I) is missing, after which one asks with who or what.

18Chris98
1 year ago
Reply to  JMC01

The second sentence is also correct. It’s a call.

JMC01
1 year ago
Reply to  18Chris98

This can only be done if one ignores the first sentence and the question as such. In fact, however, the imperative should be called “heh” and not “heh”.

18Chris98
1 year ago

Before the questioner corrected the question, it was not pointed out that the content is the same in an alternative sentence. In some grammar tasks, similar sentences are also set for a different statement. So at that time it was not fundamentally wrong before the questioner had supplemented the sentences.

In addition, “also” does not say what you should decide for, but that both are both going and going right.

JMC01
1 year ago

“Also” says what you should choose. And as it comes to BEIDE phrases as an alternative with the same meaning, you’re wrong anyway.

sonnenperlchen
1 year ago

It is both correct, but it is different statements.

JMC01
1 year ago
Reply to  sonnenperlchen

Wrong.

18Chris98
1 year ago
Reply to  JMC01

But it’s right.