0
Peaceblinkfriend Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

"If you take out a subscription now, it comes with a/one year of free subscription(s) "

If you take out a subscription now, it comes with a/one year of free subscription(s)

1. Does this sound like a natural thing people would say when they are telling a friend about an offer?

2. Should 'subscription' be plural or singular?

3. Would you say 'a' or 'one' year ?

4. If I said 'a year's free subscription' instead, how would you comment on the sentence?

Thank you

PBF
  

Top answer

It comes with a year's free subscription. It comes with one year's free subscription. It comes with a one year free subscription.

  • It comes with a year's free subscription.
  • It comes with one year's free subscription.
  • It comes with a one year free subscription.
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.

5 Answers
0
It comes with a year's free subscription.

It comes with one year's free subscription.

It comes with a one year free subscription.
0
optilangIt comes with a one year free subscription.
It comes with a one-year free subscription. (Shouldn't 'one year' be hyphenated?)
0
Hi guys,
If you take out a subscription now, it comes with a/one year of free subscription(s)

To be natural, try to avoid repeating words.

If you take out a subscription now, it comes with a/one free year.

If you take out a subscription now, it's free for a year / for the first year.

Best wishes, Clive
0
Thanks for all of your replies guys. ; )

PBF

Related Questions