Trouvez des professeurs en Anglais
themax
'you better', you'd better'
How do I use these phrases? I mean for i.e. 'You better do something' or 'You'd better do sth'? What form is right? And in which cases each phrase is used?
28 juil. 2009 08:37
Réponses · 1
1
Hello Maxpancho,
*You'd better is a contraction of " you had better" and it is an idiomatic phrase
meaning " ought, should or must do something".
You had better hurry up if you want to catch the plane.
It can't be the 2nd verb in a phrase. You can't say for example:
You will had better......
When speaking most people leave out "had" and say " you better ....
You better hurry up if you want to catch the plane.
28 juillet 2009
Vous n'avez pas encore trouvé vos réponses ?
Écrivez vos questions et profitez de l'aide des locuteurs natifs !
themax
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Français, Russe, Ukrainien
Langue étudiée
Anglais, Français
Articles qui pourraient te plaire

The Power of Storytelling in Business Communication
44 j'aime · 9 Commentaires

Back-to-School English: 15 Must-Know Phrases for the Classroom
31 j'aime · 6 Commentaires

Ten Tourist towns in Portugal that nobody remembers
59 j'aime · 23 Commentaires
Plus d'articles