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You look good vs You are looking good - English Language Learners Stack . . . Possibly most people would rather be "good looking" A quick search of "would you rather look good or be good looking" or "would you rather have good looks or be good looking" reveals that most of the comparisons are against "good looking", e g "Would you rather be rich or good looking?" In general "looking good" has the feeling of
infinitive vs gerund - Why is it v-ing after looking forward to . . . Chen's looking forward his new job next week There were four choices: to starting to start starting in starting My answer was "to start", because I knew the structure of "looking forward to" and because of the presence of "to", I used the infinitive But the answer was "to starting" Why "V-ing" is used in this case?
infinitive vs gerund - The usage of looking forward to - English . . . In my opinion, we should use "having" after "looking forward to " because we always say "looking forward to hearing from you", so an ing-form of verb should be placed after the phrase " looking forward to" May someone please explain about the usage for me?
Had looked or was looking? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange 1 " was looking " is the correct answer Simply due to the presence of the conjunction When which in your example grammatically expects a past tense rather than a past perfect tense The only situation when had looked would be correct: I found my key after I had looked for something else OR After I had looked for something else I found my key
He is good looking vs He is looking good [duplicate] The second sentence use looking as a main verb in the verb phrase "is looking" and good is now an adverb modifying the verb phrase "is looking " The sentence means, informally, that he looks well or is doing well
At or in the mirror? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange In would be used when you are looking at something in the mirror, i e , you are looking at the reflection For example: He looked in the mirror to check out the haircut At would be used if you are looking at the mirror itself or the fixture around the mirror, e g , the mirror frame or the quality of the glass, and not at the reflection For example: I was looking at this antique mirror
meaning - When to use find when to use look for? - English . . . look [intransitive] to try to find somebody something I can't find my book—I've looked everywhere look for somebody something Where have you been? We've been looking for you Are you still looking for a job? We’re looking for someone with experience for this post