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To my knowledge there is NO difference between them! We use both, and they both mean I'm travelling in this direction. They are what we call colloquialisms. Used in a friendly, casual way! Good
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"I better" has worked its way into today's growing variety of colloquialisms - "I'd better" which, by extension, is "I had better" is, ahem, better English
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Hi,
Colloquialisms vary by country. I think some British persons might informally say 'It cost 200 pound' . However, I don't think a North American would ever say 'It cost 200 dollar '. He might
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of colloquialisms and modern English in general. Your appreciation encourages me to go on. CB
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://www.usingenglish.com/links/Slang_and_Colloquialisms/American_Slang/
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I really need more context for these colloquialisms, gtivan.
1) This may be as in the baseball term-- an illegal pitch-- so perhaps 'an unfair suggestion'?
2) Yes, as the previous poster
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these things are used poorly.
For that reason, it's dangerous to use colloquialisms. Unless you
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in English, for the word-for-word translation of Russian idioms, colloquialisms and metaphors of my own
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an oppurtunity to get used to American English colloquialisms (sp) (that means I don't know if the spelling
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but we have some ways that most people just seem to prefer. 'Colloquialisms' are often thought
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