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  • Near to me or near me? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    Near to is not usually used before the name of a place, person, festival, etc Not only is near me considerably more popular than near to me in both British and American books, but a look through instances of the latter shows many Biblical quotes and other archaic language In the NOW Corpus, near me is 31 times more common
  • Near, Nearer, Nearest - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    He's a near relative friend of mine I have no intention to visit London in near future We drove to the station in near silence (near used in the sense of almost) As for the sentence "Take me to a nearer station than that station", I think it also sounds a bit weird It should be as follows: Take me to a station which is nearer than that station
  • grammar - Could it be correct to say near from? - English Language . . .
    Depending on how close you mean, you could also use near by The school is near by my house which has a closer meaning, e g across the street, than
  • Is there any difference between sit next to someone, sit beside . . .
    "sit next to me" implies sitting in the very next seat, on one side or the other How close that is will depend on how closely the seats are spaced, however "sit beside me" often implies sitting fairly close, possibly touching "sit by me" just means sitting in my general vicinity
  • word choice - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    I said 'regardless of distance' The woman called the ring that because it was on the other woman's finger, even though it was near I might well call something near me that if I was not holding or touching it (unless I was using this and that to compare a near and a far object) –
  • word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    -leave somebody doing something Never leave children playing near water unattended -leave somebody to something I’ll leave you to it (=go away and let you continue with what you are doing) My youngest boy has not left my side (=has stayed near me) since his daddy was killed
  • Me vs my [pronunciation] in British English
    This is not a substitution of me for my but a common dialectal pronunciation of my (Northern England and some Australian accents) According to Wikipedia , other areas of the North have regularised the pronouns in the opposite direction, with meself used instead of myself
  • nearby (close by) as an adjective, a preposition, or an adverb
    And whenever usage like He lived near by the railway station appeared, it was frowned upon, and was explained that it is the case of compound preposition -near by But usage changed again, and OED and other modern grammarians started to consider nearby as a preposition all over again
  • personal pronouns - as well as I vs as well as me - English . . .
    So one hears people saying things like: Me (or Myself) and my friend were at the party and This comes from my wife and I These are simply wrong Coming to your particular question: while it's correct to say: John visited the party as well as I , it sounds all wrong and very few native English speakers would say that
  • It is missing something. VS There is something missing. VS . . .
    These three sentences are all grammatically correct The first sentence probably doesn't suit your context, "it" needs a referent; but, as far as I can understand, you are mentioning that something unknown is missing





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