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Zany banana 409 Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

'Through' before 'under'

I'm driving my car through under the bridge.

Is this sentence grammatically correct to mean that I have taken the route that is under the bridge? Or, would it be simply 'I'm driving my car under the bridge'?

Please help!

  

Top answer

zany banana 409 Or, would it be simply 'I'm driving my car under the bridge'? Normally this will suffice. You do not normally need to say "my car" if this can be readily assumed.

  • zany banana 409 Or, would it be simply 'I'm driving my car under the bridge'?
  • Normally this will suffice.
  • You do not normally need to say "my car" if this can be readily assumed.
  • "I'm driving my car through under the bridge" is possible if in some sense you are driving "through" to a place at the same time as driving under a bridge.
  • g.
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1 Answers
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zany banana 409 Or, would it be simply 'I'm driving my car under the bridge'?

Normally this will suffice. You do not normally need to say "my car" if this can be readily assumed.

"I'm driving my car through under the bridge" is possible if in some sense you are driving "through" to a place at the same time as driving under a bridge. There would normal

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