posted by rfvv yesterday at 3:54pm.
1. I wish for you that, with every year, you achieve all of your dreams.
[Is it grammatical? Do we have to delete 'for'?]
2. You’re supposed to let go of the past and start off new.
[Do we have to put 'the ' before 'new'?]
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English - rfvv yesterday at 3:55pm
1. I wish for you that, with every year, you achieve all of your dreams.
[Is it grammatical? Do we have to delete 'for'?]
2. You are supposed to let go of the past and start off new.
[Do we have to put 'the ' before 'new'?]
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English - Writeacher today at 9:41am
1. I wish for you that, with every year, you achieve all of your dreams.
[Is it grammatical? Do we have to delete 'for'?]
Yes, this sentence is grammatically correct, and you need to keep "for" in this phrasing. I'd use "reach" in place of "achieve," though.
2. You are supposed to let go of the past and start off new.
[Do we have to put 'the ' before 'new'?]
No, no need for "the" before "new."
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3. I wish for you that you achieve all of your dreams.
4. I wish you that you achieve all of your dreams.
5. I wish that you achieve all of your dreams.
[Which ones are grammatical among them? Do we need to use #3 instead of #5?]
1 answer
#s 3 and 5 are OK. #5 is better than #3.
(I'd still use "reach" rather than "achieve"!)