0
Mr. Tom Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

"in the front" vs "at the front"

Hi

Could you please tell me which sentence sounds better?


Please look at your front.

Please look in the front.

Please look at the front.

Thanks,

Tom
  

Top answer

They mean different things. " -- Not terribly likely. Means look at the front part of your upper body (or the front part of an item of clothing you're wearing on your upper body).

  • They mean different things.
  • " -- Not terribly likely.
  • Means look at the front part of your upper body (or the front part of an item of clothing you're wearing on your upper body).
  • " -- Means look in the front part of some object that has an "inside" (a drawer or a car, for example).
  • " -- Means look at the front part of some object.
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.

1 Answers
0
They mean different things.



"Please look at your front." -- Not terribly likely. Means look at the front part of your upper body (or the front part of an item of clothing you're wearing on your upper body).



"Please look in the front." -- Means look in the front part of some object that has an "inside" (a drawer or a car, for example).



"Ple

Related Questions