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Vincent Teo Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

Travel by

Can I say,

He likes to travel (to work) by train / on the train / in the train.
  

Top answer

He likes to travel to work by train (Could be more than one train or used for a general reader that wouldn't know the particular route) He likes to travel to work on the train (Normally one train or the reader would know the route) He likes to travel to work in the train - wrong

  • He likes to travel to work by train (Could be more than one train or used for a general reader that wouldn't know the particular route) He likes to travel to work on the train (Normally one train or the reader would know the route) He likes to travel to work in the train - wrong
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4 Answers
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He likes to travel to work by train (Could be more than one train or used for a general reader that wouldn't know the particular route)

He likes to travel to work on the train (Normally one train or the reader would know the route)

He likes to travel to work in the train - wrong
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He likes to travel to work by train is the most commen sentence I think. As Dave Phillips said, he likes to travel to work in the train is wrong.

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Thanks, can I just say:

He likes to travel by train.
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Yes, as already explained.

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