birdeen's call
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- Jul 15, 2010
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What do you think about the use of "too" at about 1:17 in this video?
Of course, I am concerned that young people shouldn't break into other people's cars, too.
I'm not sure why I noticed that actually but I have two guesses. Firstly, I think I observe native speakers using "either" whenever there is any trace of negation in a sentence. It might not be true that they do it, but that's what I notice. Do they actually?
It sound fine to me, BC.I think either would work with the wording he chose for his sentence, woudn't it? (Irrespective[STRIKE](ly)[/STRIKE] of the "concerned" issue.) Is that right?
PS: I've just got stuck on the "it" I've marked red. Is it correct? "Either" is singular so it should be but it doesn't sound right to me.