Alyosha Radyuk
Do you think I'm using "ease up" correctly in the following sentences? 1/ John doesn't look healthy at all. I think he needs to ease up on his studies and have some rest 2/ You're not chopping that wood, you're smashing it. Ease up on that axe! Thanks
3 mars 2021 05:36
Réponses · 2
2
Yeah! In both situations you are using it correctly.
3 mars 2021
1
Yep, you used them perfectly. The only (tiny) suggestion is when you say "I think he needs to ease up on his studies and have some rest", to sound like a native speaker (at least in the US), you'd say, "I think he needs to ease up on his studies and get some rest". It's a tiny suggestion, and the way you wrote it is not wrong. 👍👍👍
3 mars 2021
Vous n'avez pas encore trouvé vos réponses ?
Écrivez vos questions et profitez de l'aide des locuteurs natifs !