Question

Posted by rfvv on Sunday, April 10, 2011 at 9:51pm.

He asked me a question.
He asked a question of me.

He begged me a question.
He begged a question of me.

He inquired me a question.
He inquired me of a question.

(Are the pairs all correct and interchangable? Doe they have the same meaning?)
English - Writeacher, Sunday, April 10, 2011 at 9:54pm
The first pair is correct and interchangeable, but the others aren't.

The 3rd sentence is not correct.

The 5th and 6th are not correct. For this, you'd need to say, "He inquired about .... " (The "me" part wouldn't be there.)


English - rfvv, Sunday, April 10, 2011 at 10:08pm
3. He begged me a question.
4. He begged a question of me.

5. He inquired me a question.
6. He inquired a question of me.

(Thank you for your help. #6 should be changed. Among the four sentences, which ones are not grammatical? Is #6 correct?)


English - Writeacher, Sunday, April 10, 2011 at 10:38pm
Among these four sentences, only #4 is correct. The word "inquire" is not used with an indirect object or "to" and an object.

He inquired about my illness.
He inquired about their children.
He inquired about the train fare from Washington to New York.
=====================
7. He demanded a person an answer.
8. He demanded an answer of a person.
(Thank you for your help. What about Sentence 7 and Sentence 8? Are they grammatical?)

Answers

Reed
#7 is wrong. "He demanded a person TO answer." would be correct. Or "He demanded an answer to his question." He demanded an answer. Person is not the object. Answer is. #8 is grammatically correct.

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