0
Sharan Yadav R Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

There are mostly quite friendly. But, at first they might seem often busy and not interested in speaking. But if you live there you know that most of them are happy to chat if they have time and help you if they can.

Is the paragraph above grammetically correct?
  

Top answer

I wouldn't use both mostly and quite in the same sentence; use one or the other. Don't start a sentence with but; you can make the first two sentences into one with a comma. You can just leave the but off the third sentence altogether.

  • I wouldn't use both mostly and quite in the same sentence; use one or the other.
  • Don't start a sentence with but; you can make the first two sentences into one with a comma.
  • You can just leave the but off the third sentence altogether.
  • I'd say, If you live there you will discover that...
  • and to help you if they can.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
I wouldn't use both mostly and quite in the same sentence; use one or the other. Emotion: wink Don't start a sentence withbut;

Related Questions