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Angliholic Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

It dispenses ice and water in the door

I really like this refrigerator. It dispenses ice and water in the door.

Hi,

I wonder if I could say "It gives out ice and water" instead of "It dispenses ice and water" in the above. If not, what is its colloquial version? Thanks.
  

Top answer

Gives out is wrong. Dispenses is the colloquial version. The fridge has an ice and water dispenser.

  • Gives out is wrong.
  • Dispenses is the colloquial version.
  • The fridge has an ice and water dispenser.
  • id=-Yk9YG1Bd4cC&pg=PA136&lpg=PA136&dq=%22ice+and+water+dispenser%22&source=web&ots=dbj1yQAdWw&sig=yPMgEKQ6kh6ZH-hQCvka9jIhAwo by Susan Maney Lovett - 2006 - House & Home - 224 pages Its style does not allow for a through-the-door ice and water dispenser , but refrigerated foods are at a more comfortable height.
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1 Answers
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Gives out is wrong. Dispenses is the colloquial version. The fridge has an ice and water dispenser.

http://books.google.com/books?id=-Yk9YG1Bd4cC&pg=PA136&lpg=PA136&dq=%

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