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Alex Young 5828 Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Go on vs go through

Although it was exhausting for them, the participants in the London Marathon managed to ................ with the schedule of the events.

a. go on; b. go away; c. go through; d. go over.

In this case, is it better to use go through? Would (a) be possible as well?

  

Top answer

I suppose "on" and "through" seem the least worst options, but I'm not sure that the sentence makes overall sense. What "schedule" and what "events" is it talking about? If it is talking about completing the race, then "...

  • I suppose "on" and "through" seem the least worst options, but I'm not sure that the sentence makes overall sense.
  • What "schedule" and what "events" is it talking about?
  • If it is talking about completing the race, then "...
  • with the schedule of the events" isn't right anyway.
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1 Answers
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I suppose "on" and "through" seem the least worst options, but I'm not sure that the sentence makes overall sense. What "schedule" and what "events" is it talking about? If it is talking about completing the race, then "... with the schedule of the events" isn't right anyway.

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