0
Rommel Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

Should I say ‘at’ or ‘to’ ‘aboard’ or ‘on board’ in the given sentences?

Should I say ‘at’ or ‘to’ ‘aboard’ or ‘on board’ in the given sentences?


We saw a helicopter that was about to fly. Frantically we waved our hands (at, to) the two people (aboard, on board). The young female pilot and her companion noticed us.

  

Top answer

Rommel Frantically we waved our hands (at, to) to but, you don't need the highlighted part. Rommel We saw a helicopter that was about to fly . This is possible but, take off would be more natural.

  • Rommel Frantically we waved our hands (at, to) to but, you don't need the highlighted part.
  • Rommel We saw a helicopter that was about to fly .
  • This is possible but, take off would be more natural.
  • Rommel (aboard, on board).
  • on board or inside .
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
RommelFrantically we waved our hands (at, to)

to but, you don't need the highlighted part.

RommelWe saw a helicopter that was about to fly.

This is possible but, take off would be more natural.

Related Questions