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Devin
I am confused with the phrase "dream of" and "dream about".What is the difference between them?
31 de ene. de 2016 2:58
Respuestas · 5
2
I think you could say "i dream of" when you are talking about a wish or desire, and "I dream about" when you are telling someone about dreams that you have regularly.
for example
"I dream of swimming with dolphins" - i wish i could do this in the future
"I dream about flying nearly every night" - i go to sleep and dream I can fly.
31 de enero de 2016
1
I created a video that answers this question. You can see it here:
https://youtu.be/4YCow4Ya0uo
31 de enero de 2016
As Kevin says, they are very similar. Both "of" and "about" are prepositions, and many prepositions have very subtle shades of meaning.
I was trying to think, anecdotally, how I may use them differently, but it was hard. For every rule I "invented", I realized that I could use the words interchangeably.
31 de enero de 2016
I think they are close in meaning. Dream of may be somewhat more specific than dream about. But I looked on line a bit and don't see any good distinction between these terms. If there is, it is very subtle.
31 de enero de 2016
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Devin
Competencias lingüísticas
Chino (mandarín), Inglés
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés
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