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Liton Das Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

Clear enough

There is a chapter in mathematics called "Unitary method" and one of my students doesn't understand it well so I said that -


Since you're not clear enough on unitary method so you're going to do these problems again.


Here clear enough means she doesn't have a hold on good enough on this chapter. Is my sentence correct if not please correct it.

  

Top answer

"Since" and "so" are redundant together. To tell someone they are going to do something is outrageously high-handed. You need a comma to mark the end of the introductory clause.

  • "Since" and "so" are redundant together.
  • To tell someone they are going to do something is outrageously high-handed.
  • You need a comma to mark the end of the introductory clause.
  • Since you're not clear enough on unitary method, you're going to have to do these problems again.
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1 Answers
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"Since" and "so" are redundant together. To tell someone they are going to do something is outrageously high-handed. You need a comma to mark the end of the introductory clause.

Since you're not clear enough on unitary method, you're going to have to do these problems again.

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