perros
ACCESO USUARIOS |Email Contraseña No recuerdo mi contraseña Inciar sesión en Perros.com|No estás registrado? Regístrate Registrate en Perros.com
Foro de Montas
Montas

Meet with or meet someone

Moderadores: Damzel, sandrarf
Usuario Titulo: Meet with or meet someone

evasingle

¡Adicto Total!
PuntuaciónPuntuaciónPuntuaciónPuntuaciónPuntuación
2105 mensajes
Sin foto
0 Albumes (0 fotos)
0 perros (0 fotos)

Sexo: Hombre
Edad: 24 años
Provincia: Matam
Publicado: Sunday 29 de March de 2026, 07:30
Hello, Guest!

Article about meet with or meet someone:
English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Meet" a friend or "meet with" a friend? Meet a friend or meet with a friend. I'm meeting my friend today.

Click here for Meet with or meet someone


I sometimes meet with my friends. Thank you but it's not what I ask about. Is it possible"
Meet" a friend or "meet with" a friend? Meet a friend or meet with a friend. I'm meeting my friend today. I sometimes meet with my friends. Thank you but it's not what I ask about. Is it possible to use the expression meet with friends or I must only say meet friends? If you want to use the latest neologism then you "meet up with" a friend and get two redundant words for the price of one. Thanks for deleting the question. I'd like to advise you to visit our sister site English Language Learners and try to ask specific questions. It is not easy to learn and understand how English words work unless you spend a lot of time reading various sources such as newspaper, magazine, etc. ELL will be helpful to you. Thank you . I think I better read,speak and understand than translate. It is really difficult because of culture gap. 2 Answers 2. 1: I sometimes meet my ex-wife in the park 2: I sometimes meet with my ex-wife in the park. The default meaning of #1 is that I encounter her (probably accidentally) when I go to the park, whereas for #2 it's that I meet up with her by arrangement from time to time. This is because to meet on its own has a broad range of possible meanings. But if you include the preposition (to meet with ) , this puts more focus on the idea that you spent time with the other person, rather than briefly encountered them. If you're talking about a future meeting, it's probably planned in advance anyway, and you'll be expecting to do more than simply nod to each other in passing.
Denunciar mensaje Citar


conectados
Usuarios conectados
Tenemos 0 usuarios conectados. 0 invitados y 0 miembro/s:

Enlaces link Razas de perros|Foro de Perros|Venta perros|Adiestramiento perros|Adopciones de perros
Razas destacadas link Pastor alemán|Bulldog|Bull terrier|Yorkshire|Boxer|San bernardo|Schnauzer|Golden Retriever|Doberman|Labrador Retriever
Copyright © 1997-2015 Perros.com - Todos los derechos reservados
Publicidad en Perros.com| |Aviso Legal|Política de privacidad|Condiciones de uso