Hernandez
Hi, there I feel like you can use “do it” in the first sentence to stand in for “reach the Land”, but you can’t do that for the second sentence. What could I use instead, so I don’t need to repeat “make the beat friends”? “Meteors, space rocks from asteroids that can reach the Earth, but they don't always do it.” “Co-workers can make the best friends, but they don’t always do it” Maybe “Co-workers can make the best friends, they more than often don’t”... Would that work?.... What about “But it’s not always that they do”.... Does either work? Thank you!
Mar 8, 2021 2:08 PM
Answers · 11
1
Hi Hernandez, For both of these sentences, you can just omit the "do it" and finish on "always". 1. “Meteors, space rocks from asteroids that can reach the Earth, but don't always” Or a more clear way of saying it might be: “Meteors, space rocks from asteroids that can – but don't always – reach the Earth” 2. “Co-workers can make the best friends, but they don’t always” I hope that helps!
March 8, 2021
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