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Victor_amelkin Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

"in its price", "almost at all"

Could you please check the following sentence:

"Due to the lack of wearing out and the high stability of prices, the product does not lose in its price almost at all."

Two particular questions:

1) Is the expression "in its price" correct, or it'd better to say "its value"?
2) Is the adverb "almost" used here appropriately?

Thanks in advance.

--
Victor
  

Top answer

Its value is much better than price. Almost at all doesn't fit here. In the slightest - if it loses no value, if it loses a slight value then leave the sentence after value.

  • Its value is much better than price.
  • Almost at all doesn't fit here.
  • In the slightest - if it loses no value, if it loses a slight value then leave the sentence after value.
  • "
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1 Answers
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Its value is much better than price.

Almost at all doesn't fit here. In the slightest - if it loses no value, if it loses a slight value then leave the sentence after value.

An advanced/native speaker may say " due to the resilience of the product and stability of the economy, the produce doesn't depreciate in value."

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