English, asked by sh9id, 1 month ago

when you get compared or when you are getting compared? which one is correct???​

Answers

Answered by angielauramartinez
2

Answer:

Neither is more correct than the other, but a slight distinction can be made in meaning.

Explanation:

To has traditionally been preferred when the similarity between two things is the point of the comparison and compare means 'liken': I hesitate to compare my own works to those of someone like Dickens.

Answered by brainlygirll
2

both are correct according to the tense

when it is (when you get compared ) - future tense

when it is (when are getting compared) - present continuous tense

hope this helps you !!

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