Math, asked by Nitrome, 8 months ago

difference between "onto" and "into" functions with comprehensive examples​

Answers

Answered by rnhtnjt
0

When a verb with in (e.g., hand in, dive in) is followed by to, keep the in and the to separate. For example:

Jump in to see if it's cold.

Hand it in to the police.

Be aware though that some verbs can include the preposition into (e.g., dive in, dive into). These rules apply to verbs with on as well.

Watch the verb turn into as it has two meanings: to move into somewhere and to transform something. For example:

To turn into the garage.

To turn into stone.

To avoid ambiguity, use in to for the move into somewhere meaning. The issue with upto and up to is much easier. The word upto does not exist.

guidelines above apply equally to onto. It is noteworthy, however, that onto can mean on top of. When this causes a problem, use on to.

Examples:

After seeing the sheep, we moved onto the cows.

After seeing the sheep, we moved on to the cows.

Up To and Upto

Finally, the easy one: up to is never written as one word.

Example:

I can afford upto 400 pounds.

(should be up to)

It takes up to four hours to hard boil an ostrich egg.

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Answered by teju8910
0

Step-by-step explanation:

Into and onto are prepositions, words that describe relative position. ... “In to” and “on to,” on the other hand, are combinations of an adverb (in or on) and the preposition to. Unlike the single-word forms, they look both backward (in and on refer to a preceding verb) and forward .

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