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Cottus Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

"... studying my last year at the university." Correct?

Hi! Just found this forum. but created an account immediatelly. What a helpful community it appears to be! Perfect for my development in the english language.

On to the question:
"... studying my last year at the university."
Is this a correct way of saying it? I don't know, something just doesn't feel right about it.

Even if it is correct, is there any other way of saying it "better".

- Cottus
  

Top answer

Hi. Welcome to English forums. It is correct, however, more context is needed to know what you are trying to say, but a quick note, if you are studying your last year, you are a senior, so you can say it that way.

  • Hi.
  • Welcome to English forums.
  • It is correct, however, more context is needed to know what you are trying to say, but a quick note, if you are studying your last year, you are a senior, so you can say it that way.
  • Hamid
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3 Answers
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Hi.
Welcome to English forums.
It is correct, however, more context is needed to know what you are trying to say, but a quick note, if you are studying your last year, you are a senior, so you can say it that way.
Hamid
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Thank you!

Ok, so it is a grammatically correct sentence. I'm not living in an english-speaking country, so I don't believe "senior" will be very clear for a person reading it here. I didn't even know only the last years' were called seniors.

The sentence can begin with e.g. "I am...", so "I am studying my last year at the university.", or perhaps "Currently I am living in CITYNA
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When I lived in England many years ago, we said eg I'm in my last year of university.

I think the term 'senior' in this meaning is N. American.

Clive

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