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.
2023年11月5日 10:10
解答 · 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.
2023年11月5日
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".
2023年11月5日
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.
2023年11月5日
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.
2023年11月5日
They are all correct, but they would sound more natural if you just said: "... a month..."
2023年11月5日
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