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- be agreed to with by - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
1 This action was agreed with Jake 2 This action was agreed to with Jake 3 This action was agreed to by Jake There are difference opinions on the correctness of the three Do you agree that 2 is
- word usage - Why is agreed used as an interjection? - English . . .
The formal meaning of "agreed" is still used (in the UK) in minutes of meetings, etc In that context, "agreed" means that the committee, or person, who agrees has the authority to make a final decision about the matter and usually that having agreed, they expect some action to be taken This meaning often applies to comments on emails in a
- Agreed or agree? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
In this case, agreed on its own means "It is accepted" agree is the verb form If you use a verb on its own, it is an imperative: telling somebody to do something So, if you simply say agree, you are telling the other person to agree with you
- prepositions - agreed to vs agreed on. Are they interchangeable . . .
The warring sides have agreed on an unconditional ceasefire All 100 senators agree to a postponement According to the definition, "agree to" implies "something to do" , but they used "on" with the ceasefire example although both parties will stop shooting at each other which is an action
- agreed to on with - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Or "he and his mother agreed upon" – MikeB Commented Aug 31, 2021 at 13:44 Also, better with past
- When asking if someone agrees or not with one word, do you say agreed . . .
The use of 'Agreed' in this instance seems to anticipate the other party agreeing with you, as if you are speaking for that person In the former case you are asking that person explicitly I would say both are correct However there are subtle differences 'Agree?' Is a direct question put to someone 'Agreed?'
- prepositions - Which one sounds more natural: agree to a price or . . .
"We agreed on the price with the customer, but then he changed his mind " "I offered $1000 for the car and she agreed to that " "We agreed on $100 for the job " In the first and third cases, the word "to" could be used instead of "on", but it would just sound more awkward, especially for the first sentence (and not as much for the third sentence)
- meaning - Agree with VS. Agree on about - English Language Learners . . .
I'm looking for the right explanation of the difference between "agree on about something" and "agree with something "
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