
ATTENZIONE
VERSIONE CORRETTA QUI SOTTO




When did you give them to her? ✅
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Author: Tony
Born and raised in Malaysia between Kuala Lumpur and Singapore. Educated at Wycliffe College in Stonehouse, Gloucestershire, England. Living in the foothills of Mount Etna since 1982 and teaching English at Catania University since 1987. View all posts by Tony

D
Nelle frasi dove tutti e due i componenti sono pronomi la struttura alternativa va utilizzata con molta cautela perché facilmente suona male o risulta poco comprensibile
D
Well done, Venera. 🙂
D
😀
On the ball, Paolo. 🙂
I’m confused about C or D
Well, one of them is right. 😉
Thinking about it better, Luca’s answer makes me think, as I think the right answer is “D”, but the sentence of the letter “C” doesn’t sound so wrong… Bel tranello direi!
Quello che voglio dire è che mi viene in mente quell’articolo “Give your English a chance” o qualcosa del genere, ma sicuramente quella frase farà parte delle “eccezioni”…
See my latest answer to Luca below. 🙂
Non sono mica una pezza da piedi, eh?
You are definitely NOT a toerag, Paolo.
Perhaps a dishcloth? 😜
Looking on the dictionary:
give [sb] [sth]
give [sth] to [sb]
so prof?
https://ingliando.net/2014/02/27/give-your-english-a-chance-with-ingliando/
“Give somebody something” is great except when both the direct and the indirect object are pronouns, as in this case. Sentence ‘C’ is possible, but it doesn’t sound great and can easily be misunderstood as a result. Consequently, in these cases, it is better to stick to the ‘standard’ formula: “give something to somebody”.