Hello,
Please tell me if this sentence is correct grammatically:
-"I always feel disappointed to see cars that don't move aside and stop for funerals pass, but this gentleman has behaved kindly. I feel pretty confident that no military law force soldiers to do so."
I wonder if we could say,
-cars that don't move aside and stop for funeral passing
-no military law forces (----> in singular form) soldiers to do so
Thank you for your help!
Changing as little as possible: "I always feel disappointed to see cars that don't move aside and stop to let funerals pass, but this gentleman has behaved kindly. " olivecar -cars that don't move aside and stop for funeral passing No, but "move aside and stop for passing funerals" works, except if you don't stop, they aren't passing. olivecar no military law forces ( ---> in singular form) soldiers to do so Well, sure.
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
Changing as little as possible: "I always feel disappointed to see cars that don't move aside and stop to let funerals pass, but this gentleman has behaved kindly. I feel pretty confident that no military law forces soldiers to do so."
olivecar-cars that don't move aside and stop for funeral passing
No, but "move aside and stop for passing funerals" w