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Son James Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Tae Kwon Do match?

A and Be are my friends but A and B don't know each other. They've been practicing Tae Kwon Do. This morning A asked me to have a duel with B. (It is like a boxing match)

- A wants to have a duel with B

In this case, which verb do I have to use?

1)A challenages B to have a duel?
2)A wants to compete with B for Tae Kwon Do?
3)A wants to fight with B for Tae Kwon Do?
4)A wants to have a match with B?

Could you teach me how to express this? Thank you in advance for your teaching.
  

Top answer

I think you can use this expression A wants B to compete for a tae kwon do match. There is no use of question mark there.

  • I think you can use this expression A wants B to compete for a tae kwon do match.
  • There is no use of question mark there.
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4 Answers
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I think you can use this expression
A wants B to compete for a tae kwon do match.

There is no use of question mark there.
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Son JamesA and B are my friends, but A and B don't know each other. They've been practicing tae kwon do. This morning, A asked me to arrange a duel with B for him. (It is like a boxing match
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Thank you so much for your teaching, shawezEmotion: embarrassed
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Thank you so much for your kindness. Enoon! Emotion: embarrassed

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