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  • Should I use got or gotten in the following sentence?
    To say you've "got" something means that you have it, now To say that you've "gotten" something means that you've obtained or received it in the past The example given doesn't use "got gotten" in that way, but given the continued use of the two words in American English, "had gotten lost" sounds better to my ear than "had got lost "
  • Using “you got it” in the sense of “you are welcome”
    Normally I would assume the meaning of you got it were something like: You do understand it right You’ve achieved your goal Or even I’ll do it for you very shortly But from time to tim
  • Which is correct: another think coming or another thing coming?
    The full phrase is if you think x, you've got another think coming Wiktionary notes on usage: This expression is used as a rebuke, often in constructions similar to "If X thinks that Y, he she has another think coming!" Sometimes the word got is included, in the familiar constructions has got and have got, as " (someone)'s got another think coming", "they've you've got another think coming
  • Buckleys Chance - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    In Australian parlance we have the expression "He's got Buckley's chance" or "You've got two chances - Yours and Buckley's" Meaning - he o you have no chance at all Who was Buckley?
  • You got it vs. I got it - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The phrase you got it means your request will be carried out It is generally used when the communication is between only two people I got it can be used to convey the same thing I will cover this as in the Example 3 in the question When the communication is from one requester to several possible responders, "I got it" can convey compliance with the request and also indicates which of the
  • idioms - What does it mean to have a crust? - English Language . . .
    Forwardness 1908 in H C Fisher A Mutt 72: You've got a crust to speak to me without an introduction 1915 D [ialect] N [otes] IV 233: That guy certainly has some crust 1929 in Galewitz Great Comics 117: Say, Emmy you gotta a lotta crust blabbin' to Mamie that you heard Uncle Willie talkin' about bein' out woth Mrs Smokehouse on the Coast
  • past tense - Got promoted vs. Was promoted - English Language . . .
    The other answers are right that "got" sounds informal in this sense - and it doesn't necessarily carry the implication that he had to work for the promotion (it can even imply the reverse - there is a slight connotation that it happened to him without his involvement, compare "he got mugged") If you want to emphasise that the promotion was deserved, you might say he earned a promotion, or he
  • grammaticality - Havent you? or dont you? - English Language . . .
    For example, "You've replied to her email, haven't you?" would be perfectly normal American (and in this case also British) English In fact, I believe the past participles "got" and "gotten" behave differently in American English in this usage So it's "you've gotten her email, haven't you," and "you've got her email, don't you "
  • conjugation - Youve got or gotten? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    I mean you can replace “have got” with “have” or the other way around “I’ve got to go” equals ”I have to go”, with this you can separate the meanings between present and present perfect tense more easily
  • Origins of You Got This and Wait For It [closed]
    ”You got this": Motivational encouragement to instill confidence to overcome some problem foe (quoting "You've got this" or "I got this" or "I've got this" also counts) "Wait for it": Command to create suspense in anticipation of some beneficial exciting occurrence which the speaker is sure will occur within the next few seconds





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