0
Stevenukd Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

Exercise

Dear Teachers,

1) When do we use “early” and “soon”?

2) You should do/take exercise at least 20 minutes each day/everyday.

- Is this ok to say?

3) Was there much damage to you car?
- Why don’t we use “were” here?
- Did your car have much damage? ( Does this sentence have the same meaning with 3?)

4) He and I treated ourselves to a movie.
- What does this sentence mean?

5) To whom does the car belong?
- Who does this car belong to?

- Which sentence is right?

6) Which is the car you are referring to?
- Which car are you referring to?

- Which sentence is right?

Thanks very much.

Stevenukd.
  

Top answer

Hello, Steven. A first try: 1. "Early" is the contrary of "late" (I arrived early at the station).

  • Hello, Steven.
  • A first try: 1.
  • "Early" is the contrary of "late" (I arrived early at the station).
  • "Soon" means in a very short time, and refers to a near future (We'll soon be at the station) 2.
  • I'd say "you should excercise" ; then I'd choose "every day", but "each day" is also correct.
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.

1 Answers
0
Hello, Steven. A first try:

1. "Early" is the contrary of "late" (I arrived early at the station). "Soon" means in a very short time, and refers to a near future (We'll soon be at the station)

2. I'd say "you should excercise" ; then I'd choose "every day", but "each day" is also correct.

3.You don't use "were" because "damage" is in the singular.

4. It means t

Related Questions