0
Anonymous Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Grammer check

If I want to write -Where disappeared all the cashiers, writing - "Where did the cashiers go" is also good? What is the best form?

-To this question was added that question - this one I wrote correct? Is it more correct to add here "was added that following question?


As to the eternal question of "Where do the ducks go when the lake freezes over?"
To this question was added that question "Where did the cashiers go?"

That's what I'd want to talk about with you.

  

Top answer

If I wanted to pay for Grocery, for instance, and there was no cashier at all. I would say: -Where is the cashier? -Where are the cashiers?

  • If I wanted to pay for Grocery, for instance, and there was no cashier at all.
  • I would say: -Where is the cashier?
  • -Where are the cashiers?
  • Regarding the second part: If I just depended on your sentence, I would say: "That question was added to this question" It will be correct grammatically, but not that clear in meaning.
  • What exactly do you want to say?
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.

2 Answers
0

If I wanted to pay for Grocery, for instance, and there was no cashier at all. I would say:

-Where is the cashier?

-Where are the cashiers?



Regarding the second part:

If I just depended on your sentence, I would say:

"That question was added to this question"

0

If I want to write -Where disappeared all the cashiers, (That is ungrammatical.)

Where are all the cashiers? Where is the check-out? Where can I pay for my items?

Related Questions