0
Anonymous Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Not necessarily previously mentioned?

Hi. Can I use the phrase "a trip" in the underlined part? Does it have to be "the trip"? Thank you in advance for your help.

John Doe plans to take a trip and thus he starts saving his money. After two months, he finally takes a trip.

  

Top answer

anonymous John Doe plans to take a trip and thus he starts saving his money. After two months, he finally takes a trip. If you write it like this, the last part could be After two months, he finally takes a trip, but it wasn't the one he was saving for.

  • anonymous John Doe plans to take a trip and thus he starts saving his money.
  • After two months, he finally takes a trip.
  • If you write it like this, the last part could be After two months, he finally takes a trip, but it wasn't the one he was saving for.
  • If instead you are referring to the trip he was saving for, then you should write the trip .
  • anonymous Not necessarily previously mentioned This header is puzzling.
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.

1 Answers
0
anonymousJohn Doe plans to take a trip and thus he starts saving his money. After two months, he finally takes a trip.

If you write it like this, the last part could be

After two months, he finally takes a trip, but it wasn't the one he was saving for.

If instead you are referring to the trip he was saving for, then you shou

Related Questions