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stoney
who can tell me the difference between "involve" and "involve in"?
who can tell me the difference between "involve" and "involve in" ?
how to use them?
2011年10月9日 12:11
回答 · 3
1
"involve in" is not a word.
The verb is "involve". This verb takes the preposition "in".
2011年10月9日
involve:
1. To contain as a part; include. the task involves hard work
2. To have as a necessary feature or consequence; entail: was told that the job would involve travel.
3. To engage as a participant; embroil: involved the bystanders in his dispute with the police
involve someone in something:
to draw someone into a matter or problem. Please don't involve me in this mess. I da not wish to involve myself in Alice's business. I didn't want to involve you in the problem we are having with the police.
-thefreedictionary.com-
2011年10月9日
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stoney
語学スキル
中国語 (普通話), 英語, 日本語
言語学習
英語, 日本語
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