I'm often befuddled when i am reading an article and the author uses talked with when referring to a conversation he/she had I've always used spoke with in such a case and sounds odd to me when used otherwise When is it proper to use talked with or spoke with? We can say talked to them in words of wisdom and talk to them in english A transitive meaning of talk This can be used in place of grammatically speaking, but conveys talking to the audience about grammar rather than simply stating something.
Given the sentence she talked to him like a child Could it be interpreted both ways She talked like a child And she talked to him as if he were a child Or is it only the former? We just talked over the phone
I believe by phone we mean the phone lines, or phone system, rather than any physical phone. As i recall, that was a —————— (= popular topic of our conversations = we always talked about it) I want a word/phrase/idiom that means ‘a common topic of conversation’ or ‘something that often comes up in conversations’. I thought we had talked about this before i've read somewhere that i should use the past perfect tense to indicate past action that occurred prior to another past action, and past perfect verbs are always formed by using adding ‘had’ before the past participle form of the verb. “speak with” well, the question is in the title I always had the impression that talk to someone refers to situations when some
1) the more he talked of his honor 2 (the more suspicious he was and sounded like a thief) 3) then follows the more we counted our spoons (silverware) to make sure they were still there. I’ve added changes/fixes which we discussed yesterday Or i’ve added changes/fixes about which we discussed yesterday. I came across the following sentence on the internet When we are talking about possession, relationships, illnesses and characteristics of people or things we can use either have or have got..
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