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MustAsk Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

Do well in vs at

When you do well in math, you are doing well in math class.

But when you do well at math, you are good with numbers.

Is this correct?
  

Top answer

To me, both probably imply that you are taking maths classes. To describe a general ability, one would say someone is "good at math(s)".

  • To me, both probably imply that you are taking maths classes.
  • To describe a general ability, one would say someone is "good at math(s)".
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1 Answers
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To me, both probably imply that you are taking maths classes. To describe a general ability, one would say someone is "good at math(s)".

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