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Anonymous Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Suit

Hi teachers. I have written this:


Jake went to a sink and tried to wash the wine stains off his suit when a man came out of a stall. Jake looked at his suit.

Jake: Can I buy your suit?


1) Is it grammatically correct?

2) Is it natural to only use "suit" or would it be more natural to refer to a part/parts of the suit, like "suit jacket"?

3) If Jake put a little water on a paper towel and try to get the suit clean while still wearing it, would you say "wash the wine stains off his suit"?

  

Top answer

Jake went to a sink and was trying to get the wine stains off his suit when a man came out of a stall. Jake looked at the man's suit. Jake: Can I buy your suit?

  • Jake went to a sink and was trying to get the wine stains off his suit when a man came out of a stall.
  • Jake looked at the man's suit.
  • Jake: Can I buy your suit?
  • 1) Is it grammatically correct?
  • Yes, with the few edits above.
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1 Answers
0

Jake went to a sink and was trying to get the wine stains off his suit when a man came out of a stall. Jake looked at the man's suit.

Jake: Can I buy your suit?


1) Is it grammatically correct? Yes, with the few edits above.

2) Is it natural to only use "suit" or would it be more natural to refer to a part/parts of the suit, like "suit jacket"?

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