I want to say this:
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that drawn me to him.
(did I use the verb "drawn" correct?)
Drawn would be used in the perfect tense. What you want is this:
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that draws me to him. (present simple, talks about now)
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that drew me to him. (past simple, talks about an undetermined time in the past)
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that had drawn me to him. (past perfect, talks about a time in the past with effects lasting into the present)
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that has drawn me to him. (present perfect, talks about a time in the past that continues into the present)
Or
"I can't pinpoint what it is about him that has drawn me to him"
"I can't pinpoint what it is about him that had drawn me to him"
Instead of drawn say drew.
It should be "draws" if you are talking in the present tense, or "drew" if it is the past tense.
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that draws me to him.
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that drew me to him.
No it's:
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that drew me towards him.
"I can't pinpoint what it is about him that drawn me to him."
Change to "I can't pinpoint what it is about him that drew him to me."
Or "I can't pinpoint what it is about him that has drawn him to me."
It should be:
"I can't pinpoint what it is about him that draws me to him."
Hope that helped!
drew, not drawn. Correctly, not correct.
we usually use draws, but if you need to use drawn, it must be preceded by a has.
it should be has drawn but you did good keep trying
REMINDER: has drawn
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Answers & Comments
Verified answer
Drawn would be used in the perfect tense. What you want is this:
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that draws me to him. (present simple, talks about now)
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that drew me to him. (past simple, talks about an undetermined time in the past)
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that had drawn me to him. (past perfect, talks about a time in the past with effects lasting into the present)
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that has drawn me to him. (present perfect, talks about a time in the past that continues into the present)
Or
"I can't pinpoint what it is about him that has drawn me to him"
"I can't pinpoint what it is about him that had drawn me to him"
Instead of drawn say drew.
It should be "draws" if you are talking in the present tense, or "drew" if it is the past tense.
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that draws me to him.
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that drew me to him.
No it's:
I can't pinpoint what it is about him that drew me towards him.
"I can't pinpoint what it is about him that drawn me to him."
Change to "I can't pinpoint what it is about him that drew him to me."
Or "I can't pinpoint what it is about him that has drawn him to me."
It should be:
"I can't pinpoint what it is about him that draws me to him."
Hope that helped!
drew, not drawn. Correctly, not correct.
we usually use draws, but if you need to use drawn, it must be preceded by a has.
it should be has drawn but you did good keep trying
REMINDER: has drawn