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Rommel Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Should I say ‘concerns’ or ‘involves,’ ‘teaching’ or ‘motivating’ in the sentence?

Should I say ‘concerns’ or ‘involves,’ ‘teaching’ or ‘motivating’ in the sentence? My choices are the second ones, but are they correct? Are ‘the academics’ and ‘while we are in school’ correctly used in the sentence?

Tenth graders Louis Morgan and Ashley Smith said: “A teacher’s job/work (concerns, involves) not only (teaching, motivating) us students to excel in the academics but also guiding us while we are in school.”

  

Top answer

” Teach and motivate have different meanings. The choice is yours. CB

  • ” Teach and motivate have different meanings.
  • The choice is yours.
  • CB
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1 Answers
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RommelA teacher’s jo involves not only (teaching, motivating) us students to excel in the academics but also guiding us while we are in school.”

Teach and motivate have different meanings. The choice is yours.

CB

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