0
Vincent Teo Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

swam across / at / on / over / in /

0 Can I say,02br
00(a)The dog swam across / at / on / over / in /02br
00into the river two hours ago. 0-
  

Top answer

0across, in, into - these are correct with different meanings. 0-

  • 0across, in, into - these are correct with different meanings.
  • 0-
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.

4 Answers
0
0across, in, into - these are correct with different meanings. Try looking up their meanings in a dictionary.02br
02br
00At and on are incorrect.0-
0
0 If I saw a dog swimming on the way to other place, I think I can use " across". When should I use " swam in" or " swarm into"? What kind of situation? 0-
0
0No.02br
02br
00Across - to go from one side of something to the other. He walked across the road. (He was on the pavement one side of the road and crossed over to the pavement on the other side of the road.02br
02br
00In and into can be confusing sometimes. In this context:02br
02br
01b00In. 1 a02b00 -- used as a fun
0
0 01blockquote
01cite10Vincent Teo12cite10Can I say,12br
10(a)The dog swam across / at / on / over / in /12br
10into the river two hours ago.12blockquote
10Hi Vincent,02br
02br
00Adding to Nona's comments, I'd like to pitch in my 2 cents02br
02br
00We can't arbitrarily

Related Questions