0
Jawel Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Special name and preposition

Hello friends.

Normally, If we want to describe a special name, we use a comma. Because it is already known, so there is no need to define it.

But what if I want to use a preposition for the main verb?

Example,

I will stay around Vatican and I will stay in Italy.

I would like to say both of them in one sentence.

Can I say :" I will stay around Vatican in Italy."?

"In Italy" doesnt define to Vatican. It refers to the verb.

Where will I stay? In Italy.

Where will I stay around in Italy? Vatican.

I think it is okay.

Do you agree with me?

  

Top answer

"? No. What do you mean by 'around the Vatican'?

  • "?
  • No.
  • What do you mean by 'around the Vatican'?
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.

3 Answers
0
JawelCan I say :" I will stay around the Vatican in Italy."?

No. What do you mean by 'around the Vatican'?

0
JawelI will stay around Vatican and I will stay in Italy.

You could say that you will stay in the Vatican City and neighbouring parts of Italy.

0
JawelNormally, if we want to describe a special name, we use a comma.

We do? I don't even know what this sentence means.

JawelBecause it is already known, so there is no need to define it.

You have a few choices, but not what you wrote:

It is already kn

Related Questions