0
Bhikkhu1991 Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

IN/FROM/OUT OF/UP

*71*1p

00The hotel is only a short drive __the station.02p

01p

00a. in02p

01p

00b. from02p

01p

00c. out of02p

01p

00d. up02p

01p

05002p

01p

00Hello,02p

01p

00Which is the correct answer ?02p

01p

00Please explain the grammar points of a,b,c and d.02p

01p

00Thank you.02p

01p

00With best wishes.02p

00 0230hrefhttp://www.britishcouncil.org/learnenglish-central-test-test-your-level.htmchttp://www.britishcouncil.org/learnenglish-central-test-test-your-level.htm
  

Top answer

02br 02br 00Best wishes, Clive0-

  • 02br 02br 00Best wishes, Clive0-
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.

3 Answers
0
0Hi,02br
02br
00First, which do you think is the correct answer, and why?02br
02br
00Best wishes, Clive0-
0
0Hello Clive,02br
02br
00I think b. and c. are correct.02br
02br
00The answer b. "from" means to show how far apart two places are.02br
02br
00As for c. "out of", when we consider the whole sentence "The hotel is only a short drive 01u00out02u00 of the station." , "01u00out02u00" means to sh
0
0Hi,02br
02br
01font00The hotel is only a short drive __the station.02font02br
02br
01font00b. from 02font00Yes, this is correct to express 'separation'.02br
02br
01font00c. out of 02font00It's true that this is an idio

Related Questions