0
Anonymous Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Natural?

A: "I don't think she understands your decision. In fact I think she's very disappointed that she didn't get an invite."

B: "I think she's alright."

Is it natural to say "I think she's alright" to A, to say that A is overreacting and that "she" has survived not getting an invite?

  

Top answer

A: "I don't think she understands your decision. " 'an invite' is commonly said, but standard English is 'an invitation'. " Is it natural to say "I think she's alright" to A, to say that A is overreacting and that "she" has survived not getting an invite?

  • A: "I don't think she understands your decision.
  • " 'an invite' is commonly said, but standard English is 'an invitation'.
  • " Is it natural to say "I think she's alright" to A, to say that A is overreacting and that "she" has survived not getting an invite?
  • ' Clive
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.

2 Answers
0

A: "I don't think she understands your decision. In fact I think she's very disappointed that she didn't get an invite." 'an invite' is commonly said, but standard English is 'an invitation'.

B: "I think she's alright."

Is it natural to say "I think she's alright" to A, to say that A is overreacting and that "she" has survived not getting an invite? If you mean all

0
anonymousget an invite."

Using that instead of invitation is a common mistake.

Related Questions