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grammar - When is it ok to use seeing? - English Language Learners . . . As far as I know it's ungrammatical to use the verb form "seeing" when perception is involved - do you mean specifically the gerund seeing, or any use of to see? Either way, it sounds wrong to this US English speaker: we use "seeing" to mean "perceiving" all the time
Looking forward to see you vs Looking forward to seeing you? I look forward to seeing you I look forward to meeting you I'm looking forward to dogsledding this winter Each of these sentences are acceptable, and use a gerund (verbal noun) You can't use other forms of the verb after the preposition to, you can't say: I'm looking forward to see you I'm looking forward to saw you
See or Seeing? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange However, I'm seeing two interpretations which are perfectly acceptable in correct English These may not match the originally intent in the argument, but they're acceptable Firstly, "see" can mean to determine something "I'll see who's at the door, and I'll see whether they're here about the car " Now consider the following exchange:
To see vs Seeing - English Language Learners Stack Exchange It felt really nice seeing all the things fall together into place Vs It felt really nice to see all the things fall together into place Is this just an infinite- gerund thing? Or are the mean
do you see are you seeing - English Language Learners Stack Exchange A: But then why do you only see are you only seeing them a couple of times a month? Would you see this as a fixed thing and use simple present, or see it as a temporary situation and use the present continuous?
present continuous - I see vs. I am seeing in the sense of . . . If you start saying I am seeing instead of I can see, people will notice you're talking like a foreigner I can't explain how it works grammatically, but Chandler's use of the continuous here serves to convey the question: "do you the same thing I see?" See here for a similar use of see in the present continuous
Difference between what do you see and what are you seeing Idiomatically, What do you see? can also be taken to mean What are you capable of seeing? (As a human being, what do you see?) The answer could be the wavelengths of light observable by the human eye
grammar - Seeing Vs On seeing - Gerund - English Language Learners . . . Can someone explain to me, the difference between "Seeing" and "On seeing"? Is "Seeing" a gerund? On seeing him, he moved faster Seeing him, he moved faster Are these two sentences both grammatically and semantically perfect?