Asked by Rebecca
is it correct English to say that There for you
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Short answer: Not by itself as a complete sentence. "There for you" is a phrase that’s fine in informal speech, but you normally need a subject and (except in very casual contexts) a verb.
What you probably mean
- "I'm there for you." (I will support you / be available to you.)
- "I'll be there for you." (future support/availability)
- "She's always been there for you." (past/present perfect)
How it's used
- As part of a sentence: "He was there for you when you needed him."
- As a short informal reply or headline: "There for you" can appear in ads, song titles, or casual speech, but it's technically a sentence fragment.
Common confusions
- Don't confuse it with "they're for you" (contraction of "they are") or "their for you" (incorrect).
If you want, tell me the sentence you intend to write and I’ll suggest the correct wording.
What you probably mean
- "I'm there for you." (I will support you / be available to you.)
- "I'll be there for you." (future support/availability)
- "She's always been there for you." (past/present perfect)
How it's used
- As part of a sentence: "He was there for you when you needed him."
- As a short informal reply or headline: "There for you" can appear in ads, song titles, or casual speech, but it's technically a sentence fragment.
Common confusions
- Don't confuse it with "they're for you" (contraction of "they are") or "their for you" (incorrect).
If you want, tell me the sentence you intend to write and I’ll suggest the correct wording.
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