Lets say we have sentence, "Today I went to the shops and it was great". Would you say that the word 'Today' is 'behind' the word "I" or in 'Front' of the word I?
book train 729 Let ' s say we have the sentence, "Today I went to the shops and it was great". Would you say that the word 'Today' is 'behind' the word "I" or in 'Front' of the word I? I'd say it's in front.
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book train 729Let's say we have the sentence, "Today I went to the shops and it was great". Would you say that the word 'Today' is 'behind' the word "I" or in 'Front' of the word I?
I'd say it's in front. Or I might say it's before.
book train 729Lets say we have sentence, "Today I went to the shops and it was great". Would you say that the word 'Today' is 'behind' the word "I" or in 'Front' of the word I?
I do not find "in front of" and "behind" useful in this context, for obvious reasons. Use "before" and "after". "Today" comes before "I" in that sentence.