Is there any similarity between “done by it” and “done by it”? How do I get done to it?

What are the meaning of these two sentences?

Something

has been done to it.

What are the different meanings?

What are some of the best stories you have heard about the British military / politicians which is so incredibly damaging to democracy?

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2 Answer(s)

What are two sentences, in a sentence? Why would I add a noun to the actual sentence?

In “Something has been done by the cat”, the cat has carried out an action, like “the cat has scratched me”.

In “Something has been done to the cat” something else has carried out an action against the cat, like “I scratched the cat”.

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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Because these sentences are from different countries, their meanings differ from each other. This means that men are opposites, as one can see from their lenses.

In the first sentence, “it” is an actors or doers of some action. In the second, “it” is the recipient of the action. (Body Texts)

For example purposes, let “something” be “A gift-giving at a party” and “it” be a man (note that “it” is used for non-human beings, and is generally viewed as dehumanizing when applied to human beings).

After that, the

man has to give the man. After that, the man is the

giver of the gift. Suppose I chose two words before the man

said (he is a giver of the gift). What gift was the gift before the party?

The man is the receiver of the gift in two sentence. The gift did not come before the party, and had it after the party.

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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