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Lucas21c Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

For/with

Could you tell me which preposition is right between 'for' and 'with' in the following sentence? Thank you in advance.

The pub offers unlimited beer [for/with] an addition $5 fee on weekends.
  

Top answer

Hi I'd say that the pub offers unlimited beer for an additional $5 fee at weekends. But that sounds like a remarkable deal! Dave

  • Hi I'd say that the pub offers unlimited beer for an additional $5 fee at weekends.
  • But that sounds like a remarkable deal!
  • Dave
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6 Answers
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Hi

I'd say that the pub offers unlimited beer for an additional $5 fee at weekends.

But that sounds like a remarkable deal!

Dave
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"pub" and "$" seems inconsistent to me. Shouldn't that be "£"?

CJ
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Hi

I understand the point :-) But I suppose it might be a pub trading in Australian, Canadian or New Zealand dollars!

Dave
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CalifJim"pub" and "$" seems inconsistent to me. Shouldn't that be "£"?CJ
Maybe in Australia?
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You won't get unlimited beer in the UK for a fiver, that's for sure. More like £5 per pint.

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