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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 Tem 2009 08:37
Yanıtlar · 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 Temmuz 2009
Hâlâ cevap bulamadın mı?
Sorularını yaz ve ana dil konuşanlar sana yardım etsin!
themax
Dil Becerileri
İngilizce, Fransızca, Rusça, Ukraynaca
Öğrenim Dili
İngilizce, Fransızca
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