So i want you to read the following sentence A) please explain to me how to do this math problem As a native speaker i usually say explain to me or explain I have seen some native speakers say. Hi all i know the correct way is explain to me, however i don't know if there is any rule about this Can you please provide me more information about this kind of verbs
Or some verbs with which i have to do the same ¿por qué algunos verbos como por exemplo explain, introduce, say, etc.necesitan de un to He explained the lesson to me correcto / he explained to us the lesson el orden de las palabras me duele you have to introduce him to me correcto don't say it to him Perfecto he gave us the basis of hydraulic modelling correcto y por otro lado. Hi everyone, if two students are are sharing their answers and one of them wants to know why their partner chose that answer, what's the correct way to ask this Or can you explain to me
If you are a child and want your mother or father to read you a story, you would usually sa y can you read me a story (where me is the recipient or, in grammatical terms, the indirect object) If you say read a story for me, you are asking the parent to fulfil a. I sometimes find myself using explain me and at other times explain to me 1) explain me how you reached that conclusion 2) explain to me how you reached that conclusion And though 1) seems right, is 2) incorrect? Please, can you explain to me the reason
Please, can you explain the reason to me ? To explain your family would be to provide reasons for how your family works or how it came to be Most of the time, people explain some things related to their families, rather than trying to analyze their families as a social unit Therefore, let me explain to you about my family is probably more common than let me explain my family to you. I wonder if i have to use 'to' when i write explain I'm going to explain you.do i have to use to between the verb and the object
There are a few verbs which share this characteristic (announce, describe, repeat, suggest) and i would like to know the grammatical explanation, if possible
OPEN