0
User_gary Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

stand against chair/person, chair's arm is hanging, chair broken, fell down along with the chair

Yesterday when the monstrous man with 150 kg, sat on the chair, the chair broken and he also fell.
Please don't stand against the chair, it(chair) may break because the chair's arm is not strong, it is hanging.
The chair's/table's legs became loose and hanging, so it's better you not sit on the chair. Otherwise you will fell down along with the chair.
Please don't stand against me, stand erect, a man from behind shouted at me on the train.


Please correct my sentences.
  

Top answer

Yesterday when the monstrous 150-kg man sat on the chair, the chair broke and he fell. Please don't stand against the chair. It may break , because its arm is not strong ; it is loose.

  • Yesterday when the monstrous 150-kg man sat on the chair, the chair broke and he fell.
  • Please don't stand against the chair.
  • It may break , because its arm is not strong ; it is loose.
  • T he legs of the chair became loose, so it's better that you not sit on it.
  • If you do, you will fall down along with the chair.
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.

1 Answers
0
.
Yesterday when the monstrous 150-kg man sat on the chair, the chair broke and he fell.
Please don't stand against the chair. It may break, because its arm is not strong; it is loose.
The legs of the chair became loose, so it's better that you not sit on it. If you do, you will fall down along

Related Questions