0
New2grammar Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

chips

0There are 5 bags of chips on the kitchen table, one of which is open. Which of the following doesn't make sense?02br
02br
001. Eat the open bag02br
02br
002. Don't open a new bag02br
02br
003. Don't open a closed bag 02br
02br
004. Don't open and unopened bag.02br
02br
00 Thanks in advance!0-
  

Top answer

0 01blockquote 01cite 10New2grammar12cite 10There are 5 bags of chips on the kitchen table, one of which is open. 12br 12br 101. 12b 12br 12br 102.

  • 0 01blockquote 01cite 10New2grammar12cite 10There are 5 bags of chips on the kitchen table, one of which is open.
  • 12br 12br 101.
  • 12b 12br 12br 102.
  • 12b 12br 12br 103.
  • 12b 12br 12br 104.
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.

4 Answers
0
0 01blockquote
01cite10New2grammar12cite10There are 5 bags of chips on the kitchen table, one of which is open. Which of the following doesn't make sense?12br
12br
101. Eat the open bag 11b10Eat 11u10from12u10 the open bag.12b12br
12br
102. Don't open a new bag 11b
0
0Thanks for your reply. I interpret eating from the open bag as not pouring the chips into a bowl or something but eating directly from the bag.02br
02br
00I guess what I really want to say is finish the opened bag first (so we don't too many opened bags and the chips may go soggy)0-
0
0 I interpret eating from the open bag as not pouring the chips into a bowl or something but eating directly from the bag.02br
01b00I don't think you need to exclude pouring them into a bowl.02b00 0-
0
0Sorry for what seems to be never ending questions. Just want to make sure I get this right, are you saying, if I take a bag of chips and pour the content out into a bowl, you would still call it "eating from the bag"?0-

Related Questions