0
JKBelieve Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

'down the floor' what does this mean?

0I just read an ad about the Lloyd's of London....it seems like a pretty interesting place. Anyway in the ad I found this sentence hard to understand 'After which you will be led into the atrium and down the floor of The Room' 02br
02br
00I was just wonder if it shouldn't be 'down to the floor' instead of being 'down the floor'....have I been wrong once again? 02br
02br
00Thanx ^^0-
  

Top answer

0The trading room/area of these organisations is called 'the floor'. 0-

  • 0The trading room/area of these organisations is called 'the floor'.
  • 0-
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.

2 Answers
0
0The trading room/area of these organisations is called 'the floor'. They will lead you through the room called 'the floor'.0-
0
0>if it shouldn't be 'down to the floor' 02br
02br
00 No, it's correct, it means: 02br
00led/taken along/across the floor 0-

Related Questions