Using “help you with” in a sentence
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If I'm not wrong, the sentence
"I want to help you with XYZ."
means, you have a problem XYZ and I am willing to help you solve that problem of yours. Right?
Now, when I have certain expertise and I want to help you solve your problem using my expertise, how do I put the whole thing in a sentence properly?
"I want to help you with my expertise." doesn't sound right.
sentence-construction phrase-usage
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up vote
4
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If I'm not wrong, the sentence
"I want to help you with XYZ."
means, you have a problem XYZ and I am willing to help you solve that problem of yours. Right?
Now, when I have certain expertise and I want to help you solve your problem using my expertise, how do I put the whole thing in a sentence properly?
"I want to help you with my expertise." doesn't sound right.
sentence-construction phrase-usage
New contributor
1
The sentence doesn't necessarily mean that the XYZ is a problem or that it is yours. It only means that I want to help you with something. It may or may not be problem (it could be a routine task), and it may or may not be yours (you could be trying to assist somebody else yourself). To have the specific meaning that you ascribe to it, you need to be explicit: "I want to help you with your problem (involving) XYZ."
– Jason Bassford
Nov 23 at 19:42
@JasonBassfor I agree that it's not necessarily a problem and that the OP is being very presumptuous with his "expertise" or the other person's lack thereof.
– squidlydeux
Nov 24 at 3:17
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
If I'm not wrong, the sentence
"I want to help you with XYZ."
means, you have a problem XYZ and I am willing to help you solve that problem of yours. Right?
Now, when I have certain expertise and I want to help you solve your problem using my expertise, how do I put the whole thing in a sentence properly?
"I want to help you with my expertise." doesn't sound right.
sentence-construction phrase-usage
New contributor
If I'm not wrong, the sentence
"I want to help you with XYZ."
means, you have a problem XYZ and I am willing to help you solve that problem of yours. Right?
Now, when I have certain expertise and I want to help you solve your problem using my expertise, how do I put the whole thing in a sentence properly?
"I want to help you with my expertise." doesn't sound right.
sentence-construction phrase-usage
sentence-construction phrase-usage
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked Nov 23 at 18:04
atiyar
1233
1233
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New contributor
1
The sentence doesn't necessarily mean that the XYZ is a problem or that it is yours. It only means that I want to help you with something. It may or may not be problem (it could be a routine task), and it may or may not be yours (you could be trying to assist somebody else yourself). To have the specific meaning that you ascribe to it, you need to be explicit: "I want to help you with your problem (involving) XYZ."
– Jason Bassford
Nov 23 at 19:42
@JasonBassfor I agree that it's not necessarily a problem and that the OP is being very presumptuous with his "expertise" or the other person's lack thereof.
– squidlydeux
Nov 24 at 3:17
add a comment |
1
The sentence doesn't necessarily mean that the XYZ is a problem or that it is yours. It only means that I want to help you with something. It may or may not be problem (it could be a routine task), and it may or may not be yours (you could be trying to assist somebody else yourself). To have the specific meaning that you ascribe to it, you need to be explicit: "I want to help you with your problem (involving) XYZ."
– Jason Bassford
Nov 23 at 19:42
@JasonBassfor I agree that it's not necessarily a problem and that the OP is being very presumptuous with his "expertise" or the other person's lack thereof.
– squidlydeux
Nov 24 at 3:17
1
1
The sentence doesn't necessarily mean that the XYZ is a problem or that it is yours. It only means that I want to help you with something. It may or may not be problem (it could be a routine task), and it may or may not be yours (you could be trying to assist somebody else yourself). To have the specific meaning that you ascribe to it, you need to be explicit: "I want to help you with your problem (involving) XYZ."
– Jason Bassford
Nov 23 at 19:42
The sentence doesn't necessarily mean that the XYZ is a problem or that it is yours. It only means that I want to help you with something. It may or may not be problem (it could be a routine task), and it may or may not be yours (you could be trying to assist somebody else yourself). To have the specific meaning that you ascribe to it, you need to be explicit: "I want to help you with your problem (involving) XYZ."
– Jason Bassford
Nov 23 at 19:42
@JasonBassfor I agree that it's not necessarily a problem and that the OP is being very presumptuous with his "expertise" or the other person's lack thereof.
– squidlydeux
Nov 24 at 3:17
@JasonBassfor I agree that it's not necessarily a problem and that the OP is being very presumptuous with his "expertise" or the other person's lack thereof.
– squidlydeux
Nov 24 at 3:17
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
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oldest
votes
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
with can introduce the tool or implement (broadly understood) that you are using, or the thing or situation that requires help:
I want to help you with that fallen tree with my chain saw.
I want to help you with your startup company with my business acumen.
They helped the town with its recovery after the earthquake with portable shelters and tankers carrying fresh water.
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
Perhaps a phrase along the lines of:
Using my expertise, I want to help you.
With my expertise, I want to help you.
I would like to offer my expertise to help you.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
Just to be very clear:
When you say "I want to help you with...," the phrase that follows is what the person needs help with, not what you are going to use to help them.
Your last sentence doesn't make sense because the other person doesn't possess your expertise, or need help with it. They need help stemming FROM the expertise, not WITH it.
Like the top answer says, it would be best to say "Using my expertise, I want to help you." Then you can add "with [thing they need help with]"
You can also put the tool you're using (your expertise) after the thing they need help with, like so:
"I want to help you with [your problem], using my expertise."
The most important thing is to keep the core phrase intact. "I want to help you with..." should always be followed by what they need help with.
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
with can introduce the tool or implement (broadly understood) that you are using, or the thing or situation that requires help:
I want to help you with that fallen tree with my chain saw.
I want to help you with your startup company with my business acumen.
They helped the town with its recovery after the earthquake with portable shelters and tankers carrying fresh water.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
with can introduce the tool or implement (broadly understood) that you are using, or the thing or situation that requires help:
I want to help you with that fallen tree with my chain saw.
I want to help you with your startup company with my business acumen.
They helped the town with its recovery after the earthquake with portable shelters and tankers carrying fresh water.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
up vote
5
down vote
accepted
with can introduce the tool or implement (broadly understood) that you are using, or the thing or situation that requires help:
I want to help you with that fallen tree with my chain saw.
I want to help you with your startup company with my business acumen.
They helped the town with its recovery after the earthquake with portable shelters and tankers carrying fresh water.
with can introduce the tool or implement (broadly understood) that you are using, or the thing or situation that requires help:
I want to help you with that fallen tree with my chain saw.
I want to help you with your startup company with my business acumen.
They helped the town with its recovery after the earthquake with portable shelters and tankers carrying fresh water.
edited Nov 23 at 18:41
answered Nov 23 at 18:36
Tᴚoɯɐuo
104k677168
104k677168
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
Perhaps a phrase along the lines of:
Using my expertise, I want to help you.
With my expertise, I want to help you.
I would like to offer my expertise to help you.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
Perhaps a phrase along the lines of:
Using my expertise, I want to help you.
With my expertise, I want to help you.
I would like to offer my expertise to help you.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
Perhaps a phrase along the lines of:
Using my expertise, I want to help you.
With my expertise, I want to help you.
I would like to offer my expertise to help you.
New contributor
Perhaps a phrase along the lines of:
Using my expertise, I want to help you.
With my expertise, I want to help you.
I would like to offer my expertise to help you.
New contributor
New contributor
answered Nov 23 at 18:26
Lee Mac
720112
720112
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
Just to be very clear:
When you say "I want to help you with...," the phrase that follows is what the person needs help with, not what you are going to use to help them.
Your last sentence doesn't make sense because the other person doesn't possess your expertise, or need help with it. They need help stemming FROM the expertise, not WITH it.
Like the top answer says, it would be best to say "Using my expertise, I want to help you." Then you can add "with [thing they need help with]"
You can also put the tool you're using (your expertise) after the thing they need help with, like so:
"I want to help you with [your problem], using my expertise."
The most important thing is to keep the core phrase intact. "I want to help you with..." should always be followed by what they need help with.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
Just to be very clear:
When you say "I want to help you with...," the phrase that follows is what the person needs help with, not what you are going to use to help them.
Your last sentence doesn't make sense because the other person doesn't possess your expertise, or need help with it. They need help stemming FROM the expertise, not WITH it.
Like the top answer says, it would be best to say "Using my expertise, I want to help you." Then you can add "with [thing they need help with]"
You can also put the tool you're using (your expertise) after the thing they need help with, like so:
"I want to help you with [your problem], using my expertise."
The most important thing is to keep the core phrase intact. "I want to help you with..." should always be followed by what they need help with.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
Just to be very clear:
When you say "I want to help you with...," the phrase that follows is what the person needs help with, not what you are going to use to help them.
Your last sentence doesn't make sense because the other person doesn't possess your expertise, or need help with it. They need help stemming FROM the expertise, not WITH it.
Like the top answer says, it would be best to say "Using my expertise, I want to help you." Then you can add "with [thing they need help with]"
You can also put the tool you're using (your expertise) after the thing they need help with, like so:
"I want to help you with [your problem], using my expertise."
The most important thing is to keep the core phrase intact. "I want to help you with..." should always be followed by what they need help with.
Just to be very clear:
When you say "I want to help you with...," the phrase that follows is what the person needs help with, not what you are going to use to help them.
Your last sentence doesn't make sense because the other person doesn't possess your expertise, or need help with it. They need help stemming FROM the expertise, not WITH it.
Like the top answer says, it would be best to say "Using my expertise, I want to help you." Then you can add "with [thing they need help with]"
You can also put the tool you're using (your expertise) after the thing they need help with, like so:
"I want to help you with [your problem], using my expertise."
The most important thing is to keep the core phrase intact. "I want to help you with..." should always be followed by what they need help with.
edited Nov 23 at 20:27
answered Nov 23 at 20:22
Aethenosity
2336
2336
add a comment |
add a comment |
atiyar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
atiyar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
atiyar is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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1
The sentence doesn't necessarily mean that the XYZ is a problem or that it is yours. It only means that I want to help you with something. It may or may not be problem (it could be a routine task), and it may or may not be yours (you could be trying to assist somebody else yourself). To have the specific meaning that you ascribe to it, you need to be explicit: "I want to help you with your problem (involving) XYZ."
– Jason Bassford
Nov 23 at 19:42
@JasonBassfor I agree that it's not necessarily a problem and that the OP is being very presumptuous with his "expertise" or the other person's lack thereof.
– squidlydeux
Nov 24 at 3:17