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prepositions - Im waiting you or Im waiting FOR TO you . . . I'm waiting {} you to get ready so we can go out I'm waiting {} you to clean your teeth I'm waiting {} you stop messing around then we can carry on One of these example questions is different to the others and may require you to have read Colin's answer first p s yes I do spend a lot of time waiting for my children
word choice - Awaits for you or awaits you? - English Language . . . You could write "The cat awaits the mouse coming out of its hole", which is technically correct but still a bit weird (2) might sound right to you if you think you can replace "waiting for" with "awaiting" ignoring context, but you can't: here the "for" is a duration, but "awaiting" only works if it indicates the thing for which you wait
Wait on vs wait for - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I've just heard your sister is waiting on you with the meaning of wait for (as in wait for the bus) Up to now I had only encountered wait on with the meaning of attend to serve Is this use o
Will be waiting — verb? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange The construction will be waiting represents the future progressive of the verb wait The present progressive is constructed with the inflected form of the verb be + the present participle (or active participle, or -ING form) of the lexical verb: I am waiting for you at the mall Jim is waiting for you at the mall The ordinary future is constructed with will + the unmarked infinitive (plain
sentence meaning - What is the difference between what you waiting for . . . The difference is that "What you waiting for?" is not standard English It may be dialect speech We ask questions about someone's actions using a form of the verb 'to be', e g What are you waiting for? What is he doing? Where are you going? When will she come? Why did he do that? Who is that man?
Wait or be waiting? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange Good point on "when I arrive" - with "be waiting" you are highlighting the fact you don't care what they will do before time comes (like "coming to pick you up in an hour, be waiting" - drink or whatever for 50 minutes, but stand ready to jump into the car after that) when with "wait" you expect particular activity not to start
prepositions - Wait at or wait on or wait in? - English Language . . . 1 He was waiting at a bus stop To me, it's the only one that makes sense, but what about "wait on a bus stop" or even "wait in a bus stop"? I've heard "wait on a bus stop" a few times, and I saw it on some websites, but it sounds wrong, and "wait in a bus stop" just sounds completely wrong
Waiting on and waiting for [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . . Waiting for something would imply that you are to receive the object in question You are waiting on the cashier (because you rely on her to continue) but you are waiting FOR your receipt, the object which you will receive