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She almost goes to cry ' or 'She almost goes cry'?

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Peter Flom answered to what you most certainly mean. If you mean she is going somewhere else, away from other people, in order to begin crying, then you can say: "She's going away in order to cry." Or, if she will soon begin, you can say "She's going to cry. read more

"She almost goes cry." is just plain wrong."She almost goes to cry." would require a very contrived context to make sense. First it's"present" tense. Bizarrely however, English doesn't normally use present tense for actions happening in the present, it uses"present continuous":"something is happening". read more

Also when my then 4 month old Vaughn got constipated, he tightened up so much it looked almost like a seizure. He would cry, then tighten up, then cry. Once he pooped a couple times he was all better though. read more

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