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  • prepositions - Join us! vs Join in us! - English Language Learners . . .
    Join us! However, one of those colleagues, taking English classes as a foreigner, told us, as explained by his teacher (also not native English speaker), that the following is also fine, with the same meaning: Join in us! And also that the following is wrong: Join to us! I never ever encountered the second form, and I think that only "Join us
  • join vs join in - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    I've heard that you have to say "join someone" and "join in something" I am going to make up a few pairs of sentences below (1a) I will join you for John's birthday lunch tomorrow (1b) I will join in for John's birthday lunch tomorrow (2a) I will join you for his retirement party next week (2b) I will join in his retirement party next week
  • to join someone in doing something or on doing something
    If we were using the phrasal verb join in, then we would have something like "Would you like to join in in watching the game?" (Yes, with a repeated in It's looks pretty funny ) Another example: "Would you like to help us in eating the pretzels " It's the same structure, but there is no such phrasal verb as help in –
  • british english - He will join us soon He will be joining us soon . . .
    I find a very slight difference between them: "will be joining" is about his intention, whereas "will join" is about future events, not about anybody's intention In this case, there is no effective difference, since the event is probably volitional for him; but consider
  • prepositions - Join in VS Join in with - English Language Learners . . .
    Guests at the hotel may join in with the festivities (here, 'with something' is needed to explain about the existence of activities) Rewriting your examples to reflect this concept: 'There are farming and fishing activities and guests can join in 'my college has international activities and I join in
  • prepositions - Join an activity or join in an activity? - English . . .
    To join in is a "phrasal verb" meaning (and syntactically equivalent to) to participate And since we need to include a preposition anyway in, for example, I will participate in the conversation, if we directly replace participate by join in, we arrive at the superficially "curious" repetition 1: I will join in in the conversation - my example
  • infinitives - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    The OP is asking to make the person welcome Most actions benefit from the passive form There is a much more limited set that can use the active form "I welcome you to sit down" would not ever be used, for example "I welcome you to join me" is the only use I can think of, offhand In the active form, it would generally be a place, e g
  • Is it right to say you wanna join? to invite someone to join me for . . .
    The word join can mean DO TOGETHER or BECOME A MEMBER If you want to use the DO TOGETHER meaning, it requires an object, for example join me or join us, or a preposition join with The BECOME A MEMBER meaning can be used without an object, as long as it's clear what group or organization somebody became a member of: It's a great club




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