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Anonymous Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Against traffic

Are these all correct and natural?

A pedestrian was on the highway walking in the direction of traffic/against traffic/toward traffic.

She was running against/toward/with the wind. Which is correct? Is toward and with the same? Thank you
  

Top answer

walking in the direction of the traffic This means the traffic as coming from behind her against traffic/toward the traffic The traffic was coming from in front of her. She was running against/toward The wind was coming from in front of her. with the wind.

  • walking in the direction of the traffic This means the traffic as coming from behind her against traffic/toward the traffic The traffic was coming from in front of her.
  • She was running against/toward The wind was coming from in front of her.
  • with the wind.
  • It was coming from behind her.
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2 Answers
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walking in the direction of the traffic This means the traffic as coming from behind her

against traffic/toward the traffic The traffic was coming from in front of her.

She was running against/toward The wind was coming from in front of her.

with the wind. It was coming from behind her.

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Hi Clive


Would you yourself say toward or against ?


Thanks

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