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Are both sentences the same? It looks like he's fooled you, too. It looks like he's got you fooled, too.
3 mai 2015 07:13
Réponses · 2
1
No
3 mai 2015
They mean basically the same thing, but the first one sounds more natural. I wouldn't use the second one unless you want to stress the word "you." (In that case, it would mean, "you" have been fooled also. I'm not the only one who has been fooled.)
3 mai 2015
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