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Joseph A Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Vocabulary

Hello everyone,

If you're a teacher. You teach two groups "A" and "B" the same curriculum. The curriculum consists of 8 units. Group "A" has finished 3 units, but "B" has finished 4 units. Can I use "ahead" and "back" in this situation as follows?

1. Group "B", you are ahead, so we have to stop until the other group reaches the same unit.

2. Group "A", you're back of group "B". They have studied one more unit than you.

Regards,

JA

  

Top answer

Joseph A 1. Group "B", you are ahead (of group "A") optional , so we have to stop until the other group reaches the same unit. 2.

  • Joseph A 1.
  • Group "B", you are ahead (of group "A") optional , so we have to stop until the other group reaches the same unit.
  • 2.
  • Group "A", you're back of behind group "B".
  • They have studied one more unit than you.
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1 Answers
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Joseph A1. Group "B", you are ahead (of group "A")optional, so we have to stop until the other group reaches the same unit.
2. Group "A", you're back of behind group "B". They have studied one more unit than you.

'back of' is not correct. It's 'in back

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