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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Vocabulary

Rewriting sentences using the words in capitals

Hello.
I've got a problem with rewriting sentences using the words in capitals (meaning must remain the same). I've already done 5 sentences, but I don't know what to do with these (I don't know what idiom/phrase I need to use). Can you help me? I'd be very grateful.
1. She ate some chocolate, which was enough until she was rescued. KEEP
(I even don't understand the sense of this sentence!)
2. The laptop's bargain and includes free software. COME
3. You were so kind to do that for me. SWEET
  

Top answer

1. She ate some chocolate, which was enough to keep her alive until she was rescued. OR She ate some chocolate, which kept her alive until she was rescued.

  • 1.
  • She ate some chocolate, which was enough to keep her alive until she was rescued.
  • OR She ate some chocolate, which kept her alive until she was rescued.
  • 2.
  • The laptop's a bargain and it comes with free software.
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4 Answers
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1. She ate some chocolate, which was enough to keep her alive until she was rescued. OR

She ate some chocolate, which kept her alive until she was rescued.
2. The laptop's a bargain and it comes with free software.
3. You were so sweet to do that for me.
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Or,

It was so sweet of you to do that for me.

CJ
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When rewriting sentences it is always hard. Let's see what we can do here. As to the first sentence, it is out of the context. When having context, everything will be clearer.

As to the third: It is so sweet of you to...

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Hello, dear! As I see, you are looking for some information about the rewriting sentences as well? We, if I understood your issue correctly, then, I hope, that you will not waste even a minute of your time and will just go to google to search for it. And after this I think that you

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