Search from various English teachers...
Kristina
For or to
Can't understand when to use "for you" and when "to you"
For example "I have got a gift for/to you"
I mean cases like this one, not only with "you" but the other pronouns or people's names and so on
May 12, 2020 11:51 PM
Corrections · 4
Thanks for all your answers!
May 13, 2020
"I have a gift for you" is about the intention. It means you have a gift with the person in mind. If someone said to me, "I have a gift for you," I would smile and say, "Thank you! What is the gift for?"
"I am giving a gift to you" is about the act of handing a gift to someone, either now or in the future. If someone said to me, "I am giving a gift to you," I would assume they are about to hand something to me.
Either way, the person will thank you for a gift. But "I have a gift for you!" is a gentler way of saying it.
May 13, 2020
Easy way to remember this:
I gave a gift to Paul
I bought a gift for Paul
These sentences basically mean the same thing.
Only difference is that:
The first sentence is just discribing the interaction between myself and Paul. Through context it might be implied that it was his birthday and I had bought him the present...but the actual sentence doesn't give any indication as to where I had got this present and why I was giving it to Paul.
The second sentence is discribing something that I did and the reason why I did it.
Doing something FOR someone is implying that the person wanted that something and you are helping them get it.
May 13, 2020
For you has a more positive connotation (you did it to help that person/thinking about them): I have a gift for you!/ I worked hard for you.
To you can either have a negative connotation (you did it because you didn't like that person), or is more about movement towards that person more so than helping them: I did something bad to you.../ I brought these shoes to you / I came to you for help.
May 13, 2020
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Kristina
Language Skills
English, Korean, Russian
Learning Language
English, Korean
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