Johnny Dangerously said:Here's one we argue about a lot:
He bought in to the coach's philosophy.
He bought into the coach's philosophy.
mediaguy said:Still waiting for a baseball walk-on to pick U2's "Walk On" as his at-bat music.
Johnny Dangerously said:Here's one we argue about a lot:
He bought in to the coach's philosophy.
He bought into the coach's philosophy.
Ace said:Johnny Dangerously said:Here's one we argue about a lot:
He bought in to the coach's philosophy.
He bought into the coach's philosophy.
Here is a case when you can avoid the issue altogether (or is it all together?) by tweaking the sentence.
Instead of "He bought into the coach's philosophy" you can say:
"He refrained from telling the coach to get the hell out of his face."
Versatile said:Johnny Dangerously said:Here's one we argue about a lot:
He bought in to the coach's philosophy.
He bought into the coach's philosophy.
Definitely two words, unless he purchased his way inside the coach's philosophy.
Also, Ace, have you ever displayed those editing skills to The Plain-Dealer? That's the kind of craftsmanship I'd want on my desk.
MightyMouse said:Ace said:Johnny Dangerously said:Here's one we argue about a lot:
He bought in to the coach's philosophy.
He bought into the coach's philosophy.
Here is a case when you can avoid the issue altogether (or is it all together?) by tweaking the sentence.
Instead of "He bought into the coach's philosophy" you can say:
"He refrained from telling the coach to get the hell out of his face."
LatrellSpreewellSprewell doesn't see the difference.