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Jun
Your country vs. where you are from For example, in the following sentences, "Do you have this in your country?" vs. "Do you have this where you are from?" What I heard was the former sounds cold and the latter is preferred (or specify the country). Otherwise, the person you are asking may think like "It's not my country. You can come if you want" or something like that? Is this true? Thank you
Jan 29, 2018 2:10 AM
Answers · 2
No, not at all. If anything, I think the first is clearer, as 'where you are from' can be ambiguous. In my country? In my city?
January 29, 2018
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