Sunday, January 22, 2017

american english - Can we use "to" before home, if we are using determiners (her, my, your etc.) before home?


I know these sentences are correct:



I am going home.


I am coming home.



I went home.



Please let me know, are these sentences also correct or not:



I am going to her home.


I am coming to your home.


I went to his home/house.



Or these are correct:




I went her home.


I am going her home.



Thanks in advance.



Answer



An interesting question: home is quirky.




  • Bare home—no preposition, no determiner—always means the home of the person in question: the person who is going home or staying home or leaving home.




    I'm going home. ... means my home
    We're staying home. ... means our home
    She's leaving home. means her home





  • With the prepositions at and from, the determiner may be omitted if the home in question is that of the person in question.



    I'm at home right now. ... I'm at my home.
    We came straight from home. ... We came from our home.






  • But if a determiner is used—any determiner, even one which defines the home in question as being that of the person in question—the preposition is also required.



    He's going to Lynne's home.   *He's going Lynne's home.
    I'm going to my home now.   *I'm going my home.






  • If two people are involved, it gets tricky; you may need a determiner or other context to disambiguate.



    I saw her home. ... will almost always mean her home
    I brought her home. ... will almost always mean my home
    I took her home. ... whose home? Probably hers, but
    She didn't have a place to stay, so I took her home. ... means my home





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