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Which is correct go here or come here?
You should consider the situation before using come or go. Come is used for movements to the place where the speaker or hearer is ( see your example) whereas go is used for movements to other places.
Is it how comes or how come?
Both are used, one more than the other; but, grammatically speaking, which is the correct one? Explanation: ‘How comes’ gets 300,000k google hits for 3 million of “how come.” And many of the hits for “how comes” are British related, so perhaps there’s a connection there.
When use How come?
HOW COME is such a common expression in English. It’s an informal way of asking a question – but not all questions can be asked using this form. When do we use HOW COME? We use HOW COME when we want to ask WHY something happened.
Is how come correct English?
It doesn’t look very grammatically correct, but it’s certainly standard informal parlance. This is informal spoken English. Common and perfectly undertandable. It should be avoided in formal written English (unless, of course, it is in a description of an informal conversation).
Is it right to say here I come?
Both are perfectly correct sentences. Both of them are used frequently by native speakers. But they mean quite different things. There are several idiomatic shades to each one, but generally one would use “Here I come” if you are approaching the person you are talking to, and “Here I go” if you are leaving them.
What does here we come mean?
1 Answer. 1. 6. “X, here we come” or “X, here I come” is a phrase meaning “We are/I am going to X”. It pretends to be addressed to the place itself: Hey, Bora Bora, I’m coming to you!
Where does how come come from?
Americans started using the phrase “how come” in the mid-1800s. It comes from older phrases such as “how comes it that…?” Although the word “how” has had a sense of “why” in its meaning for hundreds of years, “how come” is still considered to be more informal than “why.”
What means here you go?
A: “Here you go,” an idiomatic expression that showed up in writing in the 1800s, is a casual way of saying “Here it is” when you give someone something that’s requested. In the idiomatic expression “here you go,” Fortescue writes, “there is of course nothing left of any of the original meaning of ‘go’ at all.”
How can I help you formal?
Yet help is certainly formal enough for offers of professional services….
- “Nice to meet you. How can I help you?”
- “Thank you for bringing this to our attention. Let us help you on that.”
- “Let me make things better for you.”
- “We will surely help you on that.”
- “You mean a lot to us. Let me help you with that.”
What is the difference between ‘why you’re here’ and ‘why are you here’?
Both are correct in their respective roles. In English, this change in word order (“why you are” vs. “why are you”) is called an inversion.¹ It distinguishes statements from questions. The phrase “why you’re here” is an embedded question² that appears as a subordinate clause within a sentence.
How do you use here you are in a sentence?
‘Here you are’ can also be used in the sense ‘you always wanted to visit the King’s court, and now here you are…’ to refer to finally being in some place, be that a physical location, as in this example, or a place in life, eg: ‘we always wanted to be court musicians, and now here we are’.
What type of question is why you’re here?
The phrase “why you’re here” is an embedded question ² that appears as a subordinate clause within a sentence. Example: “I’d like to know why you’re here.” But “Why you’re here” cannot stand on its own as a sentence.
Is ‘why you’re here’ a question or a sentence?
“Why you’re here” can be a question construction, but more usually is part of a bigger sentence: You cannot explain why you’re here in the office in the midde of the night. You get the general idea.