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#2 (permalink) Fri Jan 08, 2010 17:32 pm Grammar - Agreed OR I Agree |
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| "agreed" or "I agree", as far as I know because you were having a conversation with that person which means: at that time, the tense was "present" not "past" |
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Gemini Alpha Female You can meet me at english-test.net

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#3 (permalink) Fri Jan 08, 2010 19:13 pm Grammar - Agreed OR I Agree |
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But I think to say just
agreed
is also wrong because it also represents past (Verb forms are:- Agree agreed agreed) |
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MyEfforts You can meet me at english-test.net
Joined: 01 Dec 2009 Posts: 94
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#4 (permalink) Fri Jan 08, 2010 19:49 pm Grammar - Agreed OR I Agree |
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I don't think so 'agreed' is wrong here, maybe I can not explain that very well, but by telling agreed you are mentioning to your friend that you have listened to his words, thought about what he said, and are satisfied that he is right about the subject and then you just tell him that 'agreed!' because a few seconds earlier you just accepted his words, or tell him 'I agree' because suddenly you understood that he is right. I don't know if my explanations is clear to you or not, but hope it helps.
Mixmixi _________________ Let's make a deal; I'll correct every single one of your grammatical mistakes AND YOU DO THE SAME FAVOUR FOR ME. |
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Mixmixi I'm here quite often ;-)

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#5 (permalink) Fri Jan 08, 2010 20:03 pm Grammar - Agreed OR I Agree |
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Mixmixi thanks for the reply, as I was looking for that.
I got the point what you meant to say
and please also tell me is it also right grammatically
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| what you meant to say |
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MyEfforts You can meet me at english-test.net
Joined: 01 Dec 2009 Posts: 94
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#6 (permalink) Fri Jan 08, 2010 20:43 pm Grammar - Agreed OR I Agree |
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Hi Yeah I think it's correct, for example 'What I really meant to say with every little breath I take is I'm not the only one who makes mistakes.'
Reference: Google _________________ Let's make a deal; I'll correct every single one of your grammatical mistakes AND YOU DO THE SAME FAVOUR FOR ME. |
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Mixmixi I'm here quite often ;-)

Joined: 21 Dec 2009 Posts: 710 Location: A better place to be
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#7 (permalink) Fri Jan 08, 2010 21:07 pm Grammar - Agreed OR I Agree |
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Hi My Efforts,
I think in ordinary conversation you would say: I agree, if you share the same opinion as that which is being expressed by another as in:
A I think that people who drive cars and use a mobile phone while they are driving, should be fined. What do you think?
B I agree.
In a business type conversation you would be more likely to say: Agreed as in:
A We've decided then to adopt our first plan, haven't we?
B Agreed.
Alan _________________ English as a Second Language You can read my ESL story Present Simple |
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Alan Co-founder

Joined: 27 Sep 2003 Posts: 13896 Location: UK
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#8 (permalink) Sat Jan 09, 2010 7:44 am Grammar - Agreed OR I Agree |
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Thanks Alan and GeminiAlpha for replying
Alan I respect what you answered but 1 point is raising in my mind which I wish to ask:
Before reading your answer I looked the Oxford dictionary and there was a sentence:
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| We agreed the proposal was good one |
If they can use We then I can also use I:
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| I agreed the proposal was good one |
But why I was wrong in the beginning ?
The reason is: What I understood from it: If I say I agreed in present then it's wrong I should say
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| I agree or in spoken English some people say agreed |
but they refer to the present not past
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| We/I agreed the proposal was good one |
But this kind of sentence (I Agreed) we can say only in past tense( OR in professional life ), means to telling someone what had happened.
Am I right Alan ? |
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MyEfforts You can meet me at english-test.net
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#9 (permalink) Sat Jan 09, 2010 9:50 am Grammar - Agreed OR I Agree |
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Please activate Javascript in your browser to listen to this audio recording | 175 Listened |
Hi My Efforts,
I have possibly not made clear what I meant. You can say; I agree/I agreed/I have agreed/I will agree/ and so on. There is no problem with the tense at all. The point I wanted to make was the difference between 'I agree/agreed' and 'Agreed' on its own. Any tense you like can be used with 'agree' of course but the use of the one word 'Agreed' without any pronoun is more often used in the business type conversation I mentioned.
I hope that makes things clearer.
Alan _________________ English as a Foreign Language You can read my EFL story Progressive Forms |
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Alan Co-founder

Joined: 27 Sep 2003 Posts: 13896 Location: UK
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#10 (permalink) Sat Jan 09, 2010 13:07 pm YES ITS TRUE |
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| Gemini Alpha ♀ wrote: |
| "agreed" or "I agree", as far as I know because you were having a conversation with that person which means: at that time, the tense was "present" not "past" |
Hi,
Ya your friend is true either use agreed or i agree.
Ok
Thanks |
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Nitikasnv3 I'm new here and I like it ;-)
Joined: 09 Jan 2010 Posts: 26
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#11 (permalink) Sun Feb 07, 2010 10:07 am Grammar - Agreed OR I Agree |
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| Alan wrote: |
Hi My Efforts,
I have possibly not made clear what I meant. You can say; I agree/I agreed/I have agreed/I will agree/ and so on. There is no problem with the tense at all. The point I wanted to make was the difference between 'I agree/agreed' and 'Agreed' on its own. Any tense you like can be used with 'agree' of course but the use of the one word 'Agreed' without any pronoun is more often used in the business type conversation I mentioned.
I hope that makes things clearer.
Alan |
Alan, I felt bad that I couldn't reply for a long time but even then I'm happy that I'm back now :)
and I couldn't stop myself to say thanks to you. I really got it, what you wanted to make me understand
and wish me all the best for my English Learning Journey :) -=- :) |
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MyEfforts You can meet me at english-test.net
Joined: 01 Dec 2009 Posts: 94
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| Bad or Badly | Adverbs question: "I usually don't have to ... " or "I don't usual |