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How do you use hi in a sentence?

How do you use hi in a sentence?

STEVE COLL: Hi there. “Hi there!” I whirl around. “Hi, there,” he said, quietly. “Hi there, monkey,” I replied.

How do you use Hey there?

It can also be used to call out or get the attention of someone you don’t know. “Hey there, watch where you’re going!” “Hey there, you in the green shirt.

Which is correct,’I have not seen’or’i haven’t seen’?

Both.First means as of this moment, you have not seen her. She may appear anytime between now and the end of this month. Second not only has she not appeared, but the month is over. Financial loophole lets you save extra for retirement. The average account holder who uses this as an investment option has a balance of $15,092.

When to use’hi there’and’there’?

in which ” there ” refers to a distant object. Sometimes “there” was followed by the identity of the object: ” Ahoy, there, ship/captain/matey “. Now we use ” hi “, ” hello “, ” greetings “, ” hey ” and etc. instead of ” ahoy ” but ” there ” is still used to emphasize the physical distance between the speaker and the object addressed.

When do you Say ” I seen it ” or ” I heard it “?

When would you say “I seen it.” I am not looking for explanations of why “I seen it” is wrong (though with sight there’s an unfair grammatical burden that doesn’t impact the other senses, whose past tense and past participle are the same – hear, heard, heard… feel, felt, felt… et cetera).

What does it mean when someone says Hi there?

Hi there! is a greeting. There refers to the position that the other person is in, so it is an adverb. It can also serve to attract attention. Hi over there! or Hello over there works the same way as Hi there or Hello there, except that the distance between the two people is greater.

Both.First means as of this moment, you have not seen her. She may appear anytime between now and the end of this month. Second not only has she not appeared, but the month is over. Financial loophole lets you save extra for retirement. The average account holder who uses this as an investment option has a balance of $15,092.

in which ” there ” refers to a distant object. Sometimes “there” was followed by the identity of the object: ” Ahoy, there, ship/captain/matey “. Now we use ” hi “, ” hello “, ” greetings “, ” hey ” and etc. instead of ” ahoy ” but ” there ” is still used to emphasize the physical distance between the speaker and the object addressed.

When would you say “I seen it.” I am not looking for explanations of why “I seen it” is wrong (though with sight there’s an unfair grammatical burden that doesn’t impact the other senses, whose past tense and past participle are the same – hear, heard, heard… feel, felt, felt… et cetera).

Hi there! is a greeting. There refers to the position that the other person is in, so it is an adverb. It can also serve to attract attention. Hi over there! or Hello over there works the same way as Hi there or Hello there, except that the distance between the two people is greater.

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Ruth Doyle