Busca entre varios profesores de Inglés...
davood007
to be sure of vs to be sure about
Do they mean the same?
to be sure about and to be sure of
12 de jun. de 2018 11:55
Respuestas · 2
2
Only real difference I can think is one small use case. If someone is expressing that they're sure about something, they'd pretty much always say they were "sure OF it".
Ex 1
"He'll be on time, I'm sure of it."
Ex 2
A: "Will he be on time?"
B: "I'm sure of it."
12 de junio de 2018
2
There is almost no difference. The only small difference might be that you would be more likely to use "sure of" when talking about something very specific, whereas "sure about" is more likely to be something a bit more general.
For example:
A: I saw his do it at 8:16pm.
B: Are you sure of that?
A: Everybody loves the music of the 1970's.
B: Are you sure about that?
But even in those examples, you could swap the answers and nobody would think you were wrong.
Any difference is so tiny and so subtle that it is not worth worrying about.
12 de junio de 2018
¿No has encontrado las respuestas?
¡Escribe tus preguntas y deja que los hablantes nativos te ayuden!
davood007
Competencias lingüísticas
Inglés, Persa (farsi), Turco
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés, Turco
Artículos que podrían gustarte

How to Ask for a Raise or Promotion in English
9 votos positivos · 8 Comentarios

The Key to Learning a Language Faster
30 votos positivos · 8 Comentarios

Why "General English" is Failing Your Career (An Engineer’s Perspective)
30 votos positivos · 12 Comentarios
Más artículos
