- Thread Starter Thread Starter
- #41
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2018
- Messages
- 5,608
- Purraise
- 11,301
That's never stood out to me before...I'm going to say this and then run away and hide...
I've never understood 'off of'. 'She got off of the plane', etc.
Here (although we're becoming more and more Americanised and I've heard it said by media people recently in Australia), it's always just been 'off'.. 'She got off the plane'. Same, I think, with British English?
So does that mean you would also say, "She got ON the plane" and not "She got ON TO the plane?" I think they are both acceptable right?