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Sb70012 Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

They don't give me enough tecahing fee

Hello,
Context: Suppose that I am a teacher teaching in an English language institute. I quit teaching in there because they pay me very low. Then I decide there and go to teach in another institute. The manager of the new institute asks me why I didn't continue teaching in the previous institute. I want to tell him that the reason I quit teaching in the previous institute is because they didn't pay me enough.

My self made sentences:
1. I don't teach there anymore because they didn't pay me enough.
2. I'm not teaching there anymore because they didn't pay me enough.
3. I don't teach there anymore because they didn't pay me enough teaching fee.
4. I'm teach there anymore because they didn't pay me enough teaching fee.
5. I don't teach there anymore because they pay me very low price.
6. I'm not teaching in there anymore because they pay me very little price.
7. I don't teach there anymore because they don't give me enough money.
7. I'm not teaching there anymore because they don't give me enough money.

These are my questions of you:
a. What's your opinion abut my self made examples? Would you please have look at them and tell me if they work?
If you were me, how would you say it?
b. Should I use preposition "in" before "there" or not?
c. Which one I should use in this context? "I'm not teaching" or "I don't teach"?
D. I am confused and don't know which one of these to use "low price" "little price" "low fee" "little fee" "not enough money" "not enough fee"

Thank you
  

Top answer

Context : Suppose that I am a teacher teaching in an English language institute. I quit teaching in there because they pay me very low. Then I decide there and go to teach in another institute.

  • Context : Suppose that I am a teacher teaching in an English language institute.
  • I quit teaching in there because they pay me very low.
  • Then I decide there and go to teach in another institute.
  • The manager of the new institute asks me why I didn't continue teaching in the previous institute.
  • I want to tell him that the reason I quit teaching in the previous institute is because they didn't pay me enough.
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3 Answers
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Context: Suppose that I am a teacher teaching in an English language institute. I quit teaching in there because they pay me very low. Then I decide there and go to teach in another institute. The manager of the new institute asks me why I didn't continue teaching in the previous institute. I want to tell him that the reason I quit teaching in the previous institute is because they didn't p
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Some alternatives as I'd say it:
I don't teach there anymore because they don't pay enough.
I stopped teaching there because they didn't/don't pay enough.
I stopped teaching there because I was underpaid.
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sb70012D. I am confused and don't know which one of these to use "low price" "little price" "low fee" "little fee" "not enough money" "not enough fee"
A price is for stuff that you buy, not for people, except in a few cases:
A criminal with a $10000 reward for capture is someone "with a price on their head. "
An official who is so honest that no

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