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Julia30

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Mar 29, 2015
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Student or Learner
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Ukrainian
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Ukraine
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Ukraine
Hello,
I am not sure when to use these two sentence:
1)shall we invite Tony and Tim round tonight?
2)Are we going to invite Tony and Tim round tonight?
They both sound similar to me. But there is a different I am sure.
There is no context as they are taken from an exercise from the course book. Destination B1
Thank you in advance.
 
1) is a suggestion, an idea being presented.
2) is a question about later plans. It suggests that the idea has already been discussed and the speaker is wondering if the plan is still going to come to fruition.
 
In AmE we would usually say "over" rather than "round".
 
They both work in BrE. I say "Are you coming round tonight?" to someone who lives fairly near me and might just come for dinner or something. I would say "Are you coming over?" to someone who has a longer drive ahead of them.

I go round to my friend Cathy's house - she lives a 10 minute drive away.
I go over to my dad's house - he lives a 30-minute drive away.
I go down to my mum's house - she lives a 90-minute drive away (in a south-easterly direction, hence "down").
 
Are the words "round" and "over" same meaning here?
 
I would use "come over" even if the other person was around the corner from me. Another BrE/AmE difference.
 
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