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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

End of bottle

What is it called when there is a bit of a liquid left in a bottle?

please correct for me.

He always leave the ends of bottles, because the coke has no gas.
There were 6 ends of bottles. All the 6 bottles together make up one whole bottle. You need to learn not to waste. Drink the whole bottle before opening a new one.

Thanks
  

Top answer

You could say, He never finishes a bottle completely, because he won't drink flat coke [coke that has lost its carbonation]. I found 6 unfinished bottles of his. Altogether it was like a whole bottle of coke.

  • You could say, He never finishes a bottle completely, because he won't drink flat coke [coke that has lost its carbonation].
  • I found 6 unfinished bottles of his.
  • Altogether it was like a whole bottle of coke.
  • He shouldn't be so wasteful.
  • He should finish one bottle before starting a new one.
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2 Answers
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You could say,

He never finishes a bottle completely, because he won't drink flat coke [coke that has lost its carbonation]. I found 6 unfinished bottles of his. Altogether it was like a whole bottle of coke. He shouldn't be so wasteful. He should finish one bottle before starting a new one.

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You would think there was a term for that, but I don't think there is.

He always leaves the last little bit of soda in the bottle because it has no fizz.
There were six nearly empty bottles. The six bottles together make up one whole bottle. You need to learn not to waste. Drink the whole bottle before opening a new one.

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