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Anita
I went shopping…:
In a city center
In the city center
At the city center
Downtown
Are all of these correct? Is there any difference?
10 sep. 2022 12:00
Antwoorden · 6
2
In the city centre means you’re being specific about which city centre you’re in. I live in Boston and I went shopping in the city centre.
In a city centre is more vague. You’re telling me it’s the centre of a city but I have no idea which city. I like to go shopping in a city centre rather than a town because there are more shops to chose from. Etc
At the city centre would be more commonly used to say exactly where you are. Where are you right now? I’m at the city centre, doing some shopping.
Downtown is an American word and as I’m from England, I will let other teachers answer that one!
10 september 2022
1
To add to Simon's answer: in most cities and towns in the US "downtown" and "the city center" are interchangeable in meaning, but "downtown" is the more frequently used term.
10 september 2022
1
Happy Mid-Autumn festival
10 september 2022
It was my pleasure to help!
10 september 2022
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
Anita
Taalvaardigheden
Engels, Frans, Italiaans, Russisch
Taal die wordt geleerd
Engels, Frans, Italiaans, Russisch
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