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Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

pay less fines

Is this logical and correct in terms of grammar?

You are better off not renting a parking spot and paying fines. You pay less fines that the cost of a parking spot per month.
  

Top answer

Anonymous Is this logical and correct in terms of grammar? You are better off not renting a parking spot and paying fines. You [will] pay less in fines tha n the cost of a parking spot per month.

  • Anonymous Is this logical and correct in terms of grammar?
  • You are better off not renting a parking spot and paying fines.
  • You [will] pay less in fines tha n the cost of a parking spot per month.
  • The first sentence works.
  • "
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2 Answers
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Anonymous Is this logical and correct in terms of grammar?
You are better off not renting a parking spot and paying fines. You [will] pay less in fines than the cost of a parking spot per month.
The first sent
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Hi,

You are better off not renting a parking spot and paying fines.

To me, the 'not' extends to 'paying fines',
ie You are better off not ( renting a parking spot and paying fines ).

I'd reword it.eg You are better off paying fines than renting a

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