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Kumenglish Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Was not much

In the context: talking about low footfall in the end of the day.

Today, There was not much footfall in our restaurant.

Is this sentence correct?

Is "was not much" suitable in the context?

  

Top answer

footfall doesn't seem to be the right word here. Your sentence doesn't seem to make sense. a footfall is the sound of a footstep.

  • footfall doesn't seem to be the right word here.
  • Your sentence doesn't seem to make sense.
  • a footfall is the sound of a footstep.
  • Do you mean eg that you don't have a lot of customers in your restaurant?
  • Clive
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2 Answers
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footfall doesn't seem to be the right word here. Your sentence doesn't seem to make sense.

a footfall is the sound of a footstep.

Do you mean eg that you don't have a lot of customers in your restaurant?

Clive

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kumenglishIs "was not much" suitable in the context?

Yes, but that's not the problem.

The expression is 'foot traffic', not 'footfall', and it's not appropriate to the inside of any building. It refers to people walking along a street.

The college's program downtown has already brought more foot traffic to the area. (More and more peopl

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