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Kumenglish Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Through misty

He drives a car through vague misty.

He could drive a car through vague misty.

Are these sentences?

  

Top answer

through is a preposition. It needs a noun after it, and you have only two adjectives ( vague and misty ). You probably want one of these.

  • through is a preposition.
  • It needs a noun after it, and you have only two adjectives ( vague and misty ).
  • You probably want one of these.
  • He can drive a car through mist.
  • He could drive a car through mist.
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1 Answers
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through is a preposition. It needs a noun after it, and you have only two adjectives (vague and misty). You probably want one of these.

He can drive a car through mist.
He could drive a car through mist.
He can drive a car through fog.
He could drive a car through fog.

'can' is for the present or future. 'could' is for

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