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Ann225 Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Grammar-arraignment

This is a made-up scenario.

"Sara exceeded the speed limit by 30km/h so the police wanted to take her driving license. She appealed against the decision and received an official notice from the local authority. Now she has to go there and give her account of what happened."

I know that I can't call it an 'arraignment', because she doesn't have to go to court but to a local authority. However, I'm not sure what word I should use.

Thank you.

Yesterday 12:55 pm
  

Top answer

Ann225 Now she has to go there Where is "there"? It would normally be a court, such as a traffic court. And the "local authority" would be a judge.

  • Ann225 Now she has to go there Where is "there"?
  • It would normally be a court, such as a traffic court.
  • And the "local authority" would be a judge.
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1 Answers
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Ann225Now she has to go there

Where is "there"? It would normally be a court, such as a traffic court. And the "local authority" would be a judge.

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