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Alc24 Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Could you please help me with these question? driving me crazy

Could you please help me with these sentences?

- I am on board (of) your plane and I will be arriving later than scheduled/planned.
- Try to take up as little/few space as possible.
- Where are you situated./located.
- For safety/security purposes, I'd advise you to change locks.
- Do you know where the store is at about/around? (how would you say that?)
- What's the date today?/Whats today?

- In 2 minutes I'll have another hour to go before I can go home.

- I've been here shorter/less than him and know how to work the system better than him. (how to say?)

Thank you
  

Top answer

Could you please help me correct these sentences? Thank you

  • Could you please help me correct these sentences?
  • Thank you
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6 Answers
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Could you please help me correct these sentences?

Thank you
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I'm not an English teacher. This is my opinion:

- I am on board (of) your plane and I will be arriving later than scheduled/planned.
I would perhaps say (depending on the speakers viewpoint):
'I am on board (of) your plane but I will be arriving later than scheduled/planned.'
Either 'scheduled' or'planned' work here I think. Maybe you could say '...than we planned'
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- I am on board (of) your the plane, and but I will be arriving later than scheduled/planned. Both OK. I prefer "scheduled".
- Try to take up as little/few
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Thank you CJ

One question regarding the last sentence?

I'm trying to say that X person's job is to work on the computer and work using a program.
I want to know if you can say " He works the program better than you" as in he knows more about it and knows how to use it better than you.

Can you say "he's been here shorter/less than you" or "he's been here for a short
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"What's today?" is okay if you want to know the day of the week. "What's today -- Wednesday?" "No, it's Thursday." (Or, as my Mother would say, "Thursday -- all day.")
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alc24... I want to know if you can say " He works the program better than you" as in he knows more about it and knows how to use it better than you.
No. That phrasing isn't right. Say:

He's better at using the [program / system] than you.

I might go for a much less formal statement:

He knows the ins and outs of the syste

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