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The phrase "head off to meet with somebody" is grammatically correct. It means to begin the journey to meet someone.
The difference is that "somebody" is informal or colloquial. Use "someone."
no
Meet somebody real.
well you phisically have to walk up to them and introduce your self, and that my friend is how you meet someone.
The homophone for the phrase "first time talking to somebody" is "first thyme talking to somebody."
The sentence 'Head off to meet with somebody to ship out this stuff to Australia' is not correct grammar because of the misplaced modifier.
confusion between somebody's actions and words: a confusing difference between the way somebody behaves and what somebody says.
In the UK you will can hello as a greeting to somebody when you meet them.
I just say hello
The sentence 'Head off to the airport to meet with somebody to ship out this stuff to Australia' is not correct grammar because it is a run on sentence.
i have no idea can somebody answer it for me