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In the quoted speech,

Laurel said, "I would be much obliged if you are to send ..."

Would it be okay if a person uses "you're to"?

and, how do you differentiate the usage of the following words

Alone, Lone, Lonesome, Loneliness, Aloneness, Lonely, Alonely [I suppose]

Lay, Lie, Laid, Lain

Fill up the form, Fill in the form, Fill out the form

if you could answer them separately, I'd appreciate it.

Thank you

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    You should ask each question separately. Stack exchange works best with a single question per thread. Also you should include your research (which dictionaries you've consulted, etc.) for each question. – KillingTime May 17 '22 at 11:08
  • After I would be, I'd expect something happening in the future, when that appreciation shows, not you are or you're. And when you look up lone and alone, notice being by yourself but not sad. – Yosef Baskin May 17 '22 at 11:26
  • Zero hits in a Google online search for "obliged if you are to". I'd say this is ungrammatical, so how can converting to a contracted form make things 'okay'? Other questions are largely general reference or a duplicate. – Edwin Ashworth May 17 '22 at 11:37

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