0
Liao886 Posted 5 years ago
Vocabulary

Usage of along

“So a kid who has been growing consistently along, say, the 25th percentile and then suddenly jumps to the 90th, that might be a signal for a pediatrician to stop and take a look at what's going on.”


Hi, I'm confused of the usage of along here. I looked it up in the dictionary. And I think I found the closest meaning: along. at a particular point on or beside sth long. But I still can't understand the meaning of this sentence and how to use "along" of this meaning.


Can you please list some example sentences with "along", too? I really appreciate your help~

  

Top answer

"Say" is inserted as a parenthetical comment. The basic phrase in question is "growing along the 25th percentile". The writer is using his words loosely, but within the limits of casual native speech.

  • "Say" is inserted as a parenthetical comment.
  • The basic phrase in question is "growing along the 25th percentile".
  • The writer is using his words loosely, but within the limits of casual native speech.
  • He is referring to the cartesian graphs that doctors use to display a child's development in height and weight.
  • Measurements of the child's height and weight are taken at regular intervals, and the points are plotted on the graph, making a line.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0

"Say" is inserted as a parenthetical comment. The basic phrase in question is "growing along the 25th percentile". The writer is using his words loosely, but within the limits of casual native speech. He is referring to the cartesian graphs that doctors use to display a child's development in height and weight. Measurements of the child's height and weight are taken at regular intervals, and t

Related Questions