student asking question

Why there are both "on" and "to" in a row?

teacher

Native speaker’s answer

Rebecca

"Hold on" describes gripping something, and "to" is the beginning of describing what is being gripped (in this case the railing). That is why "on" and "to" end up next to each other in the sentence. "Hold the railing" would also be a correct way to say this sentence.

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