The expression i'm in or count me in mean that you wish to be included in a proposed activity What is the difference between these two sentences? I'm going to the bar
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Anyone else coming? count me in! i.
I just don't get the reasoning behind which one is correct in which situation
Typically i use the wrong one, or i use them when i'm not supposed to. The phrase i am no emily would imply that emily is notable for something, either good or bad, imagine the snippet i am stuck and was told to find emily, are you emily? i am. According to the cambridge dictionary, on it means informally doing something that needs to be done, or trying to solve a problem In my experience it doesn't imply one or the.
The greeting how are you Is asking how are you doing in general [misunderstood the question.] because well as an adjective which means Is it correct to write i am gerardo and i am here

Or i am gerardo and i'm here
Is there any difference between these two statements? I live in germany where i often hear 'i gonna' or 'you gonna', in effect treating 'gonna' as a main verb and missing out the copula 'to be' Aae also has a 'zero' copula Perhaps this clitic will be
When you are invited to the party from your boss and would like to join, is it appropriate to say i'm in Does it sound too casual in a business setting (a) feeling good is the usual phrase (b) feeling is not a verb of being

There are no such things
Rather, feeling is a sense verb, representing personal sensory perception and its metaphoric. The phrase i am no emily would imply that emily is notable for something, either good or bad, imagine the snippet i am stuck and was told to find emily, are you emily? i am no. In addition to the question listed above, there is plenty more on the distinction and overlap between home & at home See why do people say i am home, difference between 'home'.

