Timur
Are these sentences written correctly? Please take all the documents to the director. I don't mind your asking me questions. Let's watch something on tv.
2016년 6월 26일 오전 2:59
답변 · 8
1
Not a native English speaker here, but if you could allow me to answer the question, I assume that the second one is as grammatically correct as 'I don't mind you asking me questions' because 'asking' can be reckoned as a gerund, noun, if it is preceded by 'your', while 'asking' which follows 'you' is meant to be present participle functioning as an adverb. Please refer to: http://www.quickanddirtytips.com/education/grammar/should-it-be-you-or-your-gerunds Anyone please correct me if I am wrong. Cheers
2016년 6월 26일
1
Hi, The second one is not grammatically correct, you are confusing "your"and "you". Remember "you" is the pronoun and "your" is for possession. It should be: "I don't mind you asking me questions." The other 2 are OK.
2016년 6월 26일
1
These ones all look pretty good. The first one is perfectly fine, but it's very formal. If you're going for something a little less formal you might say "papers" instead of documents. The second one is perfectly fine, but I think you'd hear "I don't mind you asking me questions" more often. I can't speak to the grammatical accuracy, but that's what people usually say. The last one is perfect, that's exactly what everyone says.
2016년 6월 26일
아직도 답을 찾지 못하셨나요?
질문을 남겨보세요. 원어민이 도움을 줄 수 있을 거예요!