Smiles to you / Smiles at you

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sb70012

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Hi,
In Paltalk messenger I sometimes chat to my Chinese friend. She sometimes type "Smiles to you" or "Smiles at you"
Do we have such an expression in English? I think it's just Chinese and she just translates it from Chinese to English.

Any thoughts?

Source: heard from a Chinese friend
Thanks
 

charliedeut

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Thanks for answering but did I ask the meaning of "smile"?

No, you asked about the preposition. If you cared to look closely at the examples of definition #1, maybe you would understand my link. Thank you.
 

5jj

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Thanks for answering but did I ask the meaning of "smile"?
sb, You need to be aware that the words I have underlined come across as rather rude. A more polite response to somebody who has taken the trouble to answer a question would be: "Thank you, but I actually wanted to know ..."
 
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Boris Tatarenko

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As I've understood. We can you use both prepositions? Am I right?
 

MikeNewYork

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Hi,
In Paltalk messenger I sometimes chat to my Chinese friend. She sometimes type "Smiles to you" or "Smiles at you"
Do we have such an expression in English? I think it's just Chinese and she just translates it from Chinese to English.

Any thoughts?

Source: heard from a Chinese friend
Thanks

I think the use of "smiles" has been misunderstood. It appears to me to be a noun, not a verb. I think the girl is sending "smiles" to you (not at you). We can also send "hugs", "kisses", etc. Please let me know if it is I who has misunderstood what you wrote.
 
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