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Jul 1st, 2016, 07:52 am
| eslHQ Zealot | | Join Date: Mar 12th, 2013
Posts: 148
| | surprised Hi,
What is the difference between surprised to and surprised at in the examples below?
I'm surprised to see you here. (from a dictionary)
I'm surprised at seeing you here.
Thanks.
Last edited by fface : Jul 10th, 2016 at 07:14 am.
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Jul 1st, 2016, 09:39 am
| LearnHip.com | | Join Date: Jan 26th, 2009 Location: Berlin, Germany
Posts: 31
| | Re: surprised Surprised can be followed by a verb (to + infintive), or by a noun - surprised at + noun, in your example you use the gerund seeing which is really just a verb in a noun form. You could also say surprised at the weather, surprised at the result, etc.
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Jul 1st, 2016, 10:19 pm
| eslHQ Zealot | | Join Date: Mar 12th, 2013
Posts: 148
| | Re: surprised Hi sidewalker,
Thank you for your reply. What is the difference in meaning between them? | 
Jul 2nd, 2016, 05:46 am
| LearnHip.com | | Join Date: Jan 26th, 2009 Location: Berlin, Germany
Posts: 31
| | Re: surprised For your two examples there is no difference in meaning.
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Jul 3rd, 2016, 05:10 am
| Sue | | Join Date: Oct 8th, 2006 Location: Milan
Posts: 1,406
| | Re: surprised Just a note - "at" is a preposition - which is why it must be followed by a noun phrase or gerund. So as Sidewalker says there's no difference in meaning, just a difference in the construction. Sometimes the verb is actuallytredundant, giving the option of all three : I was surprised to hear the news
I was surprised at hearing the news
I was surprised at the news
- but there might be times when there is no possible verb construction - eg : I was surprised at the weather. I didn't expect it to be so cold in July.
I was surprised at the price. I had expected it to be much more expensive.
so that the preposition + noun phrase construction is the only one possible.
"at" is also often followed by "wh" clause - especially begining with "how": Compare : I was surprised at his words.
I was surprised at what he said
I was surprised at the weather
I was surprised at how cold it was.
I was surprised at the cost,
i was surprised at how cheap it was. | 
Jul 7th, 2016, 08:08 am
| eslHQ Zealot | | Join Date: Mar 12th, 2013
Posts: 148
| | Re: surprised Quote:
Quote fface
I'm surprised to see you here? (from a dictionary)
I'm surprised at seeing you here?
| Hi susan,
Which kind of construction is more common and why? surprised to see...or surprised at seeing...?
Thanks a lot. | 
Jul 8th, 2016, 06:55 am
| Sue | | Join Date: Oct 8th, 2006 Location: Milan
Posts: 1,406
| | Re: surprised to + infinitive
Using a corpus of 3m words, both US and UK English, I got the following results :
surprised to + infinitive : 16 occurrences
surprised at + gerund : 0 occurrences
surprised at plus other form of noun phrase eg with noun head or pronoun) : 18 occurrences |
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