You Re Making Me Worried
Daniel Johnston
You Re Making Me Worried
Are you worried about me or are you worried about me? 3
What is grammatically correct and why? Provides accurate and detailed descriptions and examples.
While both may be true, people often say I'm worried about you. You can force someone to do what I'm worried about, but doing something else can be used with adjectives: you make me angry / sick / upset / scared, etc.
If you want to use a verb to complement something with Mac, it should be in simple form: I'm going to * clean * your room with it. You let me go with you. I * returned * my money.
But you can use any adjective to complete something with Mac: he and I are sick. He looked at her and spoke. I'm worried about you We are excited about the holiday season. Passionate and anxious are co-adjectives derived from verbs, but they act like adjectives.
Both are correct. There is only a slight difference in color.
Here, thought is a word, thought is emotion