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Sparklyeyes7 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

How do you read this?

I saw this in a local grocery store ad:

Screamin' Sicilian or Urban Pie Pizza
20.2-25 oz.
Selected Varieties, Regular Retail $8.99 ea.

  • Buy One, Get One FREE!

--------------------------

There is a difference in what it actually says. One person thinks you can buy any two and one is free. Another person says you have to buy two of the same brand of pizza.

But in a separate ad, they have Urban Pie Pizza on sale for $4.99, which is $4 off so why would they need to have it at buy one get one free if you can just buy a single one for almost half-off?

Thoughts?

  

Top answer

sparklyeyes7 Another person says you have to buy two of the same brand of pizza. 99. 99, which is $4 off so why would they need to have it at buy one get one free if you can just buy a single one for almost half-off?

  • sparklyeyes7 Another person says you have to buy two of the same brand of pizza.
  • 99.
  • 99, which is $4 off so why would they need to have it at buy one get one free if you can just buy a single one for almost half-off?
  • I don't know anything about their marketing strategy.
  • Maybe the time that these offers are valid are different.
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1 Answers
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sparklyeyes7Another person says you have to buy two of the same brand of pizza.

Yes, you will get 2 pizzas from the varieties of that brand for $8.99.

sparklyeyes7But in a separate ad, they have Urban Pie Pizza on sale for $4.99, which is $4 off so why would they need to have it at buy one get one free if you can just buy a sing

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