Nissy
Which sentences are correct? 1. You can reserve a ticket one month in advance. 2. You can reserve a ticket one month ahead. 3. You can reserve a ticket one month before your travel date.
5 de nov. de 2023 10:10
Respuestas · 5
2
All three sentences are correct and convey the same basic meaning. They all indicate that you can make a reservation for a ticket one month prior to your intended travel date. The choice of wording can vary, but the meaning remains consistent.
5 de noviembre de 2023
2
All are perfect. #3 is the most logically complete since the preposition has a direct object, "your travel date". If you want to be precise, say it this way. But, #1 and #2 are fine because the missing object is easily understood: "in advance of the travel date" "ahead of the travel date".
5 de noviembre de 2023
From a British English speakers perspective. The most common way would most likely be. "You can reserve a ticket a month in advance". Getting to know when to say "a' versus "one" is just a matter of exposure to the language and hearing it in use everyday. "a month" "one month" = are the same.
5 de noviembre de 2023
They are all correct but 2 sounds less natural to me. 1 and 3 are something a native speaker would say. Both ‘a month’ and ‘one month’ sound natural to me. Using ‘one’ emphasizes that you are talking about an exact time period.
5 de noviembre de 2023
They are all correct, but they would sound more natural if you just said: "... a month..."
5 de noviembre de 2023
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