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Anonymous Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

IN or TO

I attended to two high schools, in / to an American high school and a Russian High school.
(IN or To or none of them?)
  

Top answer

Anonymous I attended to two high schools, in / to an American high school and a Russian h igh school. ) See above. We simply "attend" not "attend to", in this context.

  • Anonymous I attended to two high schools, in / to an American high school and a Russian h igh school.
  • ) See above.
  • We simply "attend" not "attend to", in this context.
  • "Attend to" exists but means something totally different.
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4 Answers
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AnonymousI attended to two high schools, in / to an American high school and a Russian high school. (IN or To or none of them?)
See above.

We simply "attend" not "attend to", in this context. "Attend to" exists but means something totally different.
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Hi,

I attended to two high schools, in / to an American high school and a Russian High school.

I attended two high schools, an American one and a Russian one.



Clive
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I attended two high schools, one American, one Russian.

Shall we see just how much more we can contract this sentence?! Emotion: smile
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I attended a Russian and an American high school?

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