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Keithlaw Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Sentence ommited "that"

A sentence seems grammatically correct but I am not sure if it is right because it sounds quite wired to me

The sentence is: "My aim is to ensure you have a good experience with us."

I am wondering wouldn't "My aim is to ensure you to have a good experience with us" or "My aim is to ensure that you have a good experience with us" better??

Is the original sentence omitted "that" ???
  

Top answer

" The sentence is correct. 'That' can usually be omitted when it's a conjunction. Your other version is wrong.

  • " The sentence is correct.
  • 'That' can usually be omitted when it's a conjunction.
  • Your other version is wrong.
  • CB
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3 Answers
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keithlaw"My aim is to ensure [that] you have a good experience with us."
The sentence is correct. 'That' can usually be omitted when it's a conjunction. Your other version is wrong.

CB
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Anonymous"My aim is to ensure you have a good experience with us."
Use this, with that.
0
So "My aim is to ensure [that] you have a good experience with us." is a correct sentence?

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