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Anonymous Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

Is it grammatically correct?

We can repair the side table only, and the coffe table has been completely damaged and it is beyond repairable.

The side table can only be repaired, and the coffee table can not be repaired as it has been completely damaged. It is beyond repairable.

  

Top answer

This is all you need: We can repair the side table, but the coffee table is so damaged that it cannot be repaired. (You can substitute 'that it is beyond repair' for 'that it cannot be repaired' if you want. ) CJ

  • This is all you need: We can repair the side table, but the coffee table is so damaged that it cannot be repaired.
  • (You can substitute 'that it is beyond repair' for 'that it cannot be repaired' if you want.
  • ) CJ
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1 Answers
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This is all you need:

We can repair the side table, but the coffee table is so damaged that it cannot be repaired.

(You can substitute 'that it is beyond repair' for 'that it cannot be repaired' if you want. But the correct expression is 'beyond repair', not 'beyond repairable'.)

CJ

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