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dogsbody70 (Offline)
Busier Than Shinjuku Station
 
Posts: 1,919
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: South coast England
10-02-2010, 04:49 PM

@Yuri - When you move 'to' a country, it implies a person is going to a different country. An example is me: "I want to move to Japan." The 'to' in red, is the one that shows the action of moving. If you move 'into' a country, it implies moving into the country by force. Example: "Adolf Hitler moved into Poland". And if you move in a country, it suggests you are moving around in the same country. Example: "I moved in Japan, from Nagoya to Akita." Jambo.



this is all so laughable. why should moving into a country be seen to be done by force? Thats bizarre.

We stay in a country, we are within the country we have entered into a country. However, enjoy yourselves folks--

now let somebody write a ditty about this farcical situation.
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