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Alexey
Tom Cruise
Hello everyone! Can you help me to understand this sentense?
"Tom Cruise was clearly not in on a joke with local pranksters"
He didn't appreciate the joke, obviously. What else can someone not be "in on with"?
Thank you for your examples!
May 15, 2015 10:04 PM
Answers · 10
2
"sentence"
"to be in on" - to be well informed about, to know about
"he is in on all the latest fashion, music..."
"he is well informed and keeps in on whatever is happening in his profession.....
May 15, 2015
1
You've nearly asked this same question before :-) http://www.italki.com/question/270060
My previous answer was:
To be "in on it", means to know about a plan that is only known to a select group. I could apply to a crime or a surprise birthday party for example. It doesn't necessarily imply direct involvement, it's more about the knowledge of a secret plan or scheme.
So in the case you're asking about here, the "plan" is the prank or joke they were playing on Tom Cruise. They all understood what was going on but he didn't. Thus they were "in on it" whereas he wasn't.
May 16, 2015
It's used fairly often to refer to secrets or secret plans. If you are in on a secret, you know about it when others do not.
May 15, 2015
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Alexey
Language Skills
English, Russian
Learning Language
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