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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Hi, can you listen to this and tell me what you think?

http://audio.1080thefan.com/a/30092652/kevin-harlan-tnt-commentator-4-1-10.htm


At the following times, the person says the following lines. I find that they are grammatically wrong. Can you tell me How to correctly write them?

2:36: They've gone about the right approach.

5:09: He may be in back of Scott Brooks.

9:18: Two wins in back of last year's pace. (what does this mean? Is it correct?)

Thanks in advance
  

Top answer

Anonymous I find that they are grammatically wrong. I don't. Two wins in back of last year's pace.

  • Anonymous I find that they are grammatically wrong.
  • I don't.
  • Two wins in back of last year's pace.
  • = Last year on this date they had two more wins than last year on this date.
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1 Answers
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AnonymousI find that they are grammatically wrong.
I don't.

Two wins in back of last year's pace. = Last year on this date they had two more wins than last year on this date.

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