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Vincent Teo Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

In conjunction with

Can I say,

(a) He went to practise (hockey) for the hockey tournament. It was in conjunction with Teacher's day.

(b) She had a hockey practice for the hockey tournament.

(c) She went to practise in conjunction with the hockey tournament.
  

Top answer

a natural [something happening at the same time as another, and closely related] b do you have a reason for repeating "hockey"? c for the hockey tournament

  • a natural [something happening at the same time as another, and closely related] b do you have a reason for repeating "hockey"?
  • c for the hockey tournament
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2 Answers
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a natural [something happening at the same time as another, and closely related]

b do you have a reason for repeating "hockey"?

c for the hockey tournament
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only the correct one is "a",right?

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