A: Which model are you working in?
B: I am working from home now. Sometimes, we have to work from the office.
Can we form the question this way?
I can't answer the question. To me, it's not about the word "model", but about the construction of your question. It makes me baffled.
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
I can't answer the question. To me, it's not about the word "model", but about the construction of your question. It makes me baffled.
To me, I'd say:
Which models of work are you using?
Which models do you use in working?
Or I could specify my question clearly to say something like
kumenglishWhich model are you working in?
Without context this question is puzzling. Even if the person you are asking can readily deduce that when you ask about the 'model' you are asking about working from home or working from the office, just to be more clear, I suggest the following.
Which work model do you follow?
Otherwise, i.e., i