Sometimes I agree with the people with their accordance. It doesn't mean I am wrong, it means I am not in the mood of arguing they are on.
Please help me to make it correct. It sounds correct but I need your advice should I use "argument" instead of "arguing" and tell me me and is it ok to say "with their accordance" or should I say "according to them" or "accordingly".
Liton Das Sometimes I agree with the people with their accordance. It doesn't mean I am wrong, it means I am not in the mood of arguing they are on. It doesn't make sense.
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Liton DasSometimes I agree with the people with their accordance. It doesn't mean I am wrong, it means I am not in the mood of arguing they are on.
It doesn't make sense.
I do not understand what you mean by "with their accordance". Do you mean "with their agreement"? "I agree with people with their agreement" is a kind of "clever" phrasing. I wonder
You might mean:
Sometimes I give in to people, or just let them have their way. It doesn't mean they're right. It means I don't like arguing.
Liton Dasagree with the people with their accordance.
Liton Das,
You have already been told by two different people that you must not use 'with their accordance' with the verb 'agree'. Now you're posting another example of the same thing.
CJ