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where did you get it

📝 Description
"Where did you get it?" is an interrogative sentence in English. It's used to inquire about the origin or source of an object or information someone has. "Where" is an adverb of place, "did" is the past tense helper verb, "you" is the subject, and "get it" is the main verb phrase.
📝 Example Sentence
"Hey, that's a cool jacket! Where did you get it?"
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where

📝 Description
"Where" is an adverb, pronoun, conjunction, or preposition in English. As an adverb, it implies a location or position. As a pronoun or conjunction, it introduces relative clauses, often inquiring about a place. As a preposition, it's used before gerunds, linking the place to an action.
📝 Example Sentence
"Where did you leave your keys, they are not in the usual spot."
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did

📝 Description
"Did" is the past tense of the verb "do." It's used for forming questions, negatives, emphasizing, and making short answers in past simple tense. Example in a question: "Did you eat?" and in a negative sentence: "I did not eat."
📝 Example Sentence
"Did you remember to bring the umbrella, as it's going to rain today?"
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you

📝 Description
The word "you" in English is a pronoun. It's second-person, used to refer to the person or group of people that the speaker is addressing. It's unique as it can be singular or plural and can be used as both subjective (e.g., "You are nice.") and objective (e.g., "I told you.").
📝 Example Sentence
"You are the reason I smile every day."
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get

📝 Description
"Get" is an English verb with several meanings. Its most common use is to receive, obtain, or acquire something. It can also mean "become" as in "get ready". It's used in passive constructions like "get paid" and phrasal verbs like "get up". It originates from Old Norse 'geta'.
📝 Example Sentence
Sure, here it is: "I need to get groceries for dinner tonight."
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Other Related Words & Videos

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