Iris
Does it sound natural? It's not a reason for being idle. If not, what would you say? (If you told someone that they should finish their work on time anyway.)
Nov 30, 2015 12:16 PM
Answers · 6
Yes, it is natural in the right context. If someone justifies being idle, and you think the justification is not good enough, your sentence is natural indeed.
November 30, 2015
Thank you, Kenny. Yes, a good reason is fine.
November 30, 2015
It's not a reason for being idle >ok . That is not a good reason for (you) being idle ( you answered them when they reply to you with an answer that you cannot accept)). If you see them idling > You don't have to idle ( even if your work is finished ) . Go find something else to do If they answer you with a good reason > That is still not a good reason why you should idle You should use 'good reason' because their reply is telling you the reason . So, is it good or bad? Unless , their reply is totally unacceptable
November 30, 2015
No, I mean that if you don't have to do one of the necessary things, that's not a reason for not working hard to finish the work on time.
November 30, 2015
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