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 Greek Professor
 
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							| BREAK IN OR BREAK INTO. 
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							| Hi, I need some help.I came across a multiple choice question...with:
 
 break in and break into...answer? break into.
 
 Could you please tell me the difference in usage?
 Thanks in advance
 |  2 Apr 2013      
					
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 dmharg
 
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							| when it refers to burglary both are correct |  2 Apr 2013     
					
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 Greek Professor
 
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							| AAA.....it seems you didn �t read my message well.... 
 multiple choice questions ONLY have ONE answer...so only one is right... 
 and it does refer to burglary..but break into is correct... |  2 Apr 2013     
					
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 MoodyMoody
 
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							| To expand on dmharg �s answer, both are used as verbs to mean using force to enter a building or vehicle that doesn �t belong to you. However, "break in" can also be used as a noun (at least in the USA), but "break into" is never used as a noun. Example: "My parents had a break in two years ago while they were at church." (This is also a true statement.) |  2 Apr 2013     
					
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 dmharg
 
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							| Oh yes, I agree with MoodyMoody. I completely forgot the noun. Anyway the phrasal verb is usually written in vocabularies   break in(to) |  2 Apr 2013     
					
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 Greek Professor
 
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							| Moody...:) Thanks dear...I know that too... 
 I looked them up  in the dictionary and i found the two meanings...and  in both meanings they had had the same sentences... 
 break in break into... 
 in the same sentence...so...??? |  2 Apr 2013     
					
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 dmharg
 
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							| what is the sentence. Write it down. The sentence in your multiple choice with the blank. Have to go now. see you in a couple of hours :) |  2 Apr 2013     
					
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 Greek Professor
 
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							| Dictionary: meaning to both - to enter a building by using force Sentence: Thieves broke in/into the bank vault by digging a tunnel 
 Book mcq -  My neighbour got her apartment .............while she was at the opera. 
 a) broken in b) broken off c) broken into d) broken up with 
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 IbuLulu
 
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							| In this passive form, if something is broken in you use or wear or tame something new (eg wearing a new pair of shoes to break them in), but if something is broken into it is burgled. 
 You can �t say an apartment is broken in to mean burgled.  I think break in (burgle) is only used without an object, while break into requires an object... thinking aloud...
 
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 mariflo
 
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							| IbuLulu is right. I �ve just checked Merriam-Webster. It gives break in as an intransitive verb : 
 1    : to enter something (as a building or computer system) without consent or by force eg. <the burglars broke in by smashing a window> whereas break into takes an object. Hope it helps
 
 |  2 Apr 2013     
					
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