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Hasibrahman Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

I don't think I will...

Is this sentence grammatical and natural?

? I don't think I will get that much CGPA which is worth giving you a treat.

The context was like this:

X: Have you got your result?

Y: No, it hasn't been published yet.

X: I thought you would give me a treat.

Y: I don't think I will get that much CGPA which is worth giving you a treat.


What I meant by the last line is: I don't think my result (CGPA) will be good enough to give you a treat.



P.S. A CGPA is your academic performance from 0.00–4.00, calculated as an average of your GPA from all completed terms/semesters. For example,

GPA from Fall 2017: 2.5GPA from Winter 2018: 3.1CGPA: 2.5 + 3.1 divided by 2 semesters = 2.80

  

Top answer

Do you use 'treat' like that in your part of the world? Are GPAs published in your part of the world (so that everybody can see everybody's GPA)? You don't get a private notice of your own GPA?

  • Do you use 'treat' like that in your part of the world?
  • Are GPAs published in your part of the world (so that everybody can see everybody's GPA)?
  • You don't get a private notice of your own GPA?
  • I'll assume a 'yes' for both of those.
  • X: Have you got your CGPA yet?
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1 Answers
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Do you use 'treat' like that in your part of the world?

Are GPAs published in your part of the world (so that everybody can see everybody's GPA)? You don't get a private notice of your own GPA?

I'll assume a 'yes' for both of those.


X: Have you got your CGPA yet?

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