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Hazem
Upon,onto, What the different between onto and upon ,?
29 mei 2016 01:54
Antwoorden · 3
2
"Onto" and "upon" can be synonymous: He leaped upon the chair. or He leaped onto the chair. (the latter seems more common). However, in uses such as: "Upon learning that his wife was unfaithful, he cried." "onto" would not be used. "Onto" exclusively expresses a physical location. "Upon" can be used colloquially to express a moment in time.
29 mei 2016
1
The only time I see 'upon' regularly is in the traditional beginning of a fairy tale: Once upon a time...
29 mei 2016
1
We don't use "upon" much. Use "onto" most of the time. (Or use "up on" (two words) in many cases.) He jumped up on the couch. (We would not say "He jumped upon the couch." Sounds weird.)
29 mei 2016
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