a probably stupid question from two seasons ago!

Jun 30, 2008 01:44

So, um, hello, I'm brand new to this comm and pretty new in general to the fandom (as in I only watched every episode compulsively started watching a month or two ago) and so I bring you a question so ancient it's actually from Doosmday. I'm pretty confident you guys have seen this scene, y'know, more than once, so perhaps you can CRACK THE MYSTERY THAT PERPLEXES ME SO MUCH:

When Rose says "I love you", the Doctor goes "quite right to(o)". But which 'to(o)' is it? I figured it'd be "to" as in "quite right to (love me, because I am a sexy bastard)" but I see "quite right, too" basically Everywhere, Ever and I cannot for the life of me figure out what that would mean. As in I honestly just do not get how "quite right, too" makes any sense in that context at all. Am I just missing something here? Of course the answer is probably 'yes' but man has it been driving me nuts. Accursed homophones.

eta -- ahaha it all makes sense now, I'm just a stupid Canadian! =) Thanks guys.

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