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Anonymous Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

Begins to drive/begins driving

  1. He starts the car and begins to drive around the warehouse.

  2. He starts the car and begins driving around the warehouse.

Are the sentences natural?

Does one of these sound better/more natural than the other to you native English speakers?

  

Top answer

anonymous He starts the car and begins to drive around the warehouse. He starts the car and begins driving around the warehouse. Are the sentences natural?

  • anonymous He starts the car and begins to drive around the warehouse.
  • He starts the car and begins driving around the warehouse.
  • Are the sentences natural?
  • Yes.
  • Does one of these sound better/more natural than the other to you native English speakers?
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1 Answers
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anonymous
  1. He starts the car and begins to drive around the warehouse.

  2. He starts the car and begins driving around the warehouse.

Are the sentences natural? Yes.

Does one of these sound better/more natural than the other to you native English speakers?

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