Question
23 January
- Japanese
-
English (US)
-
English (UK)
-
Simplified Chinese (China)
Question about English (US)
Please show me example sentences with please give me an text using“have you got up,i have got up” . Tell me as many daily expressions as possible.
Please show me example sentences with please give me an text using“have you got up,i have got up” . Tell me as many daily expressions as possible.
Answers
23 January
Featured answer
- English (US)
I don't think those sound natural, at least in US English.
In the US, we would say "Are you up yet?"
and "I am up".
[This could be a conversation on LINE]
A: Hey. Are you awake?
B: Yeah.
A: Come over! Let's play Mario Kart.
B: I'm still in bed. I'm a bit sleepy too. I probably won't get up until later.
A: Okay.
[Later]
A: Hey! Are you up yet?
B: Not yet. I'll text you when I am.
A: Don't forget!
[Later]
B: Hey, I'm up now. Give me a few minutes to take a shower and I'll be right over.
Highly-rated answerer
Read more comments
- English (US)
I don't think those sound natural, at least in US English.
In the US, we would say "Are you up yet?"
and "I am up".
[This could be a conversation on LINE]
A: Hey. Are you awake?
B: Yeah.
A: Come over! Let's play Mario Kart.
B: I'm still in bed. I'm a bit sleepy too. I probably won't get up until later.
A: Okay.
[Later]
A: Hey! Are you up yet?
B: Not yet. I'll text you when I am.
A: Don't forget!
[Later]
B: Hey, I'm up now. Give me a few minutes to take a shower and I'll be right over.
Highly-rated answerer
- Japanese
- English (US)
Number 1 would have to be either "I just got up" or "I have just gotten up" (again, in US English).
...Number 2 is not possible, because present perfect (like every other kind of present tense) does not belong with times in the past.
You can say "I got up early this morning" or "I have been up since early this morning".
Highly-rated answerer
- Japanese
- English (US)
Just adding to what @us4gi said, these are also sentences where using "gotten" sounds more natural. So "have you gotten up?" and "I have gotten up" sound more natural. Because "have you got up" / "have got up" sounds like broken English. The grammar just prefers "have gotten" for this phrasing.
Although using "gotten up" is a lot more common for getting up off of the ground, getting up after a fall, etc. Which is a different context.
So it is uncommon to use that for the "have you gotten up in the morning?" meaning. We do say it sometimes, but we tend to use other phrases a lot more often for getting up in the morning. Like "are you up?" and the other good examples that us4gi said. Those are just more common for this meaning.
Highly-rated answerer

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