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Angliholic Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

John is broadening an approach.

John is broadening an approach.

The above is one of the four possible choices in a test; does it make sense to you? If yes, what does it mean? Thanks.
  

Top answer

Hi, John is broadening an approach. The above is one of the four possible choices in a test; does it make sense to you? It's correct grammar.

  • Hi, John is broadening an approach.
  • The above is one of the four possible choices in a test; does it make sense to you?
  • It's correct grammar.
  • If yes, what does it mean?
  • The common expression is 'John is broadening his approach'.
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4 Answers
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Hi,

John is broadening an approach.

The above is one of the four possible choices in a test; does it make sense to you? It's correct grammar.

If yes, what does it mean? The common expression is 'John is broadening his approach'. You can't usually broaden an
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Thanks, Clive.

Got it.

The question is "What is the man probably doing?" And the correct choice is "That chandlier is very fancy." Well, in fact, it's an listening test and there is a picture, which I can't draw for you here. Students have to choose the correct choice based on the question and the picture.
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Hi,

The question is "What is the man probably doing?" And the correct choice is "That chandlier is very fancy." Well, in fact, it's an listening test and there is a picture, which I can't draw for you here. Students have to choose the correct choice based on the question and the picture.

If the question is 'What is the man probably doing?', 'Th
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Sorry, my bad.

The question is "What is the woman probably saying?"

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