• @[email protected]
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    English
    1168 months ago

    You’re thinking in terms of location, rather than state-of-being. “I’m home” is your status.

    “I’m driving, I am bored, I’m safe, I am away”… None of those sound weird, do they? This, combined with the more technical grammar rules others have commented…

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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      528 months ago

      I can be at home, but it’s not until I’m in comfy pants, on the couch, with a drink in hand that I’m home

      • @surewhynotlem
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        8 months ago

        Home is the adjective. It’s a state of being.

        Many times I’ll walk in the door but need to log into work, and I’ll say to my wife “I’m not home yet”. As in, my external responsibilities are not completed and I am not available. When I’m available to my family or to relax, I have then become “home”.

        Edit: I meant adverb. It modified the state of being. Like being “away”.