0
Speedoz Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Appreciation


Is it grammatically correct to say:

Whether you are happy with your work or not, satisfied or not, you should appreciate that you have a job and not unemployed
  

Top answer

Hi, Is it grammatically correct to say: Whether you are happy with your work or not, satisfied or not, you should appreciate that you have a job and not unemployed No. Whether you are happy with your work or not, satisfied or not, you should appreciate that you have a job and are not unemployed . Clive

  • Hi, Is it grammatically correct to say: Whether you are happy with your work or not, satisfied or not, you should appreciate that you have a job and not unemployed No.
  • Whether you are happy with your work or not, satisfied or not, you should appreciate that you have a job and are not unemployed .
  • Clive
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.

2 Answers
0
Hi,

Is it grammatically correct to say:

Whether you are happy with your work or not, satisfied or not, you should appreciate that you have a job and not unemployed

No.

Whether you are happy with your work or not, satisfied or not, you should appreciate that you have a job and
0
Thanks Clive for your quick reply.

Related Questions