alex chilton
Member
I got a grammar question too. Which one of these sentences is correct? Or are they both correct?
Don't bring food in the library.
Don't bring food into the library.
"Into" sounds correct to me but is "in" correct as well? The use of "in" makes it sound like the person is already inside of the library, therefore he can't bring in anything, that why it sounds incorrect to me. But can anyone give me a proper grammatical justification for why it is right or wrong?
Don't bring food in the library.
Don't bring food into the library.
"Into" sounds correct to me but is "in" correct as well? The use of "in" makes it sound like the person is already inside of the library, therefore he can't bring in anything, that why it sounds incorrect to me. But can anyone give me a proper grammatical justification for why it is right or wrong?