0
Angliholic Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

make good money sense

Renting or sharing transportation when you need it, instead of buying a vehicle that spends most of its time parked, makes good money sense.

Hi,
Is it proper to view "makes good money sense" in the above as "makes good sense as far as money is concerned?" Thanks.
  

Top answer

Definitely not. Avoid this kind of phrasing.

  • Definitely not.
  • Avoid this kind of phrasing.
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.

4 Answers
0
Definitely not. Avoid this kind of phrasing.
0
Thanks, Only.
Then how should I understand it?
0
AngliholicThen how should I understand it?
You shouldn't; you should rephrase it.

E.g.,

a good way to save money is
is a good way to save money
0
AngliholicIs it proper to view "makes good money sense" in the above as "makes good sense as far as money is concerned?" Thanks.
That is a good paraphrase, although it is a bit wordy.

"Good money sense" is making wise choices for what you do with your money.

That can be saving money for an emergency or a large purchase, not having too much de

Related Questions