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Anonymous Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

higher lower under above

Which is correct?
LL is below/under/lower HL. [talking about floors. In the elevator you have LL button and HL button which stand for Higher lobby and lower lobby]
HL is above/higher than LL.

Thank you
  

Top answer

I don't know in which country this is, but in Canada, it would be "LL for Lower Level" but I've never seen HL. In some taller buildings, we have "CO" for cross-over floors (where elevators service just certain floors). Interesting though!

  • I don't know in which country this is, but in Canada, it would be "LL for Lower Level" but I've never seen HL.
  • In some taller buildings, we have "CO" for cross-over floors (where elevators service just certain floors).
  • Interesting though!
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3 Answers
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I don't know in which country this is, but in Canada, it would be "LL for Lower Level" but I've never seen HL. In some taller buildings, we have "CO" for cross-over floors (where elevators service just certain floors). Interesting though!
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I see, I just want to know if you would use 'below under or lower and above or higher to let people know where HL is in relation to LL if one didn't know.

Thank you
Ps : Is this sentence correctly written:
I just want to know if you would use 'below under or lower and above or higher to let people know where HL is in relation to LL if one didn't know.
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I'm still not sure how you wish to 'let people know' that "HL is above LL" (or conversely, "LL is below HL") - but that's how I would say it.
Sentence structure:
"I just want to know if you would use 'below/under/lower' or 'above/over/higher' to let people know where HL is in relation to LL, if one didn't know."
Answer: I would use 'below' and 'above' to show the relationship

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