student asking question

I can only hear "in" not "into". Does this sentence only make sense with "into" not "in"?

teacher

Native speaker’s answer

Rebecca

Due to the speaker's intonation and slight regional American accent, his "into" sounds more like "in-ta," with there being a slight pause between "in" and "ta." The sentence does only make sense with the use of "into," and not "in." "Into" is a preposition that is used to express the movement of something towards or into something else, and it is especially used when talking about putting in time, effort, or money into something. In this video, the speaker says "put 20 hours into anything," expressing the investment of time towards something, so only "into" is appropriate here. Ex: I put months of time and effort into my thesis. Ex: The businessman put $20 million dollars into the project.

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