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Yuanyuan
Is there any difference between "just to let you know" and "just let you know"?
Is there any difference between "just to let you know" and "just let you know"?
Do they all mean "In addition""I just want you to know"?
And I don't understand they are used in what kind of situation.
Jan 14, 2016 4:16 PM
Answers · 2
5
As a sentence modifier like "by the way" or "for your information", it should be "just to let you know". The second example can't be used that way, but it might be in a sentence such as "Tell Bob to just let you know when he has finished".
January 14, 2016
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Yuanyuan
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), Danish, English, Japanese, Spanish
Learning Language
English, Spanish
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