emar
Does it make sense to say; for little money? This is the context 'If you do it right you could walk away with lots of food for little money .' And do I need ' to ' after difficult here? Did you find it easy to make friends at school? I found it difficult ( to )at college ' These are those little things I am not sure about Thank you very much
١ أغسطس ٢٠٢١ ١٠:١٧
الإجابات · 14
1
Hi Emar, the first sentence seems pretty natural. You can use "a lot of" or "lots of" with food. In the second sentence, "to" is unnecessary; two prepositions are not used after each other. Have a wonderful day or night wherever you are.
١ أغسطس ٢٠٢١
1
The first sentence is fine. In the second ‘to’ is optional. The question is whether your listener will remember the ‘to make friends’ from the previous sentence because, by itself, ‘I found it difficult at college’ wouldn’t refer to making friends. Adding ‘to’ is clearer but not necessary. It might be even better to say: When I was at/in college, I found it hard to. (Putting the ‘to’ at the end makes it stand out even more. You can also use ‘in’ instead of ‘at’. It depends on how closely you think your listener is following you!
١ أغسطس ٢٠٢١
1
You could walk away with a lot of food for very little money.
١ أغسطس ٢٠٢١
Hi, Emar! I would say the following: 1. If you do it right, you could walk away with a lot of food for very little money. 2. I found it difficult to make friends in college.
١ أغسطس ٢٠٢١
You could walk way with lots of food for a small amount of money
١ أغسطس ٢٠٢١
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