Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
Wendy Monika
I got two questions for you ?
I got two questions for you ? I don't think it's correct. Is it supposed to use I've got two questions for you ? Or both are correct?
11 juil. 2018 01:19
Réponses · 6
2
Both are correct. I would say the first, "I got two questions for you," is actually more common in modern spoken American English. Lorenzo is correct, if you are writing it, or speaking formally, use "I've got.." or more simply, "I have two questions for you."
11 juillet 2018
2
You´re right, but native speakers are lazy and sloppy. They often use the first variant. I always use the second. It´s a question of personal style, how correctly you want to speak, and your audience.
11 juillet 2018
Technically "got" and "gotten" by themselves are not verbs. They need "has, have, had" etc. However, many native speakers use "got" incorrectly. I suggest using "have" instead.
edited typo (speaker to speakers).
11 juillet 2018
I would structure that sentence like , I have two questions for you. This way it is more formal and fluent.
11 juillet 2018
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Wendy Monika
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Polonais
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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