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Sheryl
I was in here and I was here
what is the difference between"I was in here" and "I was here " ? Can you help me ? thank you very much !
Aug 22, 2015 2:55 AM
Answers · 8
3
You can say "in here" when you enter a room or building, that is somewhere inside. "In here" is more specific.
By just using the word "here", you can be talking about a general location, not usually inside but it could be inside.
Compare:
- It's cold in here (you've just entered a building).
- It's cold here (in Russia).
August 22, 2015
2
generally refers to being inside of a building or enclosed space when you use "I was in here"
"I was here" is more broad and could cover a very large area.
August 22, 2015
I'm also a student and my English is not well enough. I might be mistaken but it seems to me that "I was in here"is not right grammatical combination. May be "I was here in..."?
August 22, 2015
I was in here is not really used in a normal conversation. But I was in here implies that you were inside something like a box. I was here is what you want to use as a standard for past tense of having been at a particular location at some point in time.
September 11, 2018
When you say ' i was in here' , your meaning is that you are inside something eg room , building , etc and you want to emphasised that fact.
"I was here" is telling someone you were here somtime in the past , without emphasising whether you were inside , outside , under . above or around here. Just here .
August 22, 2015
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Sheryl
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, German, Spanish
Learning Language
English, German, Spanish
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