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Christine Christie Posted 3 years ago
Grammar

Way to be

Does this sentence make sense?

"Over the years, laughing has become part of his day-to-day like and of his way to be."


  

Top answer

I don't think it's correct. I'm not quite sure I understand the meaning you want to convey in "his way to be". I guess you meant "his existence".

  • I don't think it's correct.
  • I'm not quite sure I understand the meaning you want to convey in "his way to be".
  • I guess you meant "his existence".
  • Anyway, I'd say the following: -Over the years, laughing has become part of his day-to-day life and of his being.
  • -Over the years, laughing has become part of his day-to-day life and his way of being optimistic.
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2 Answers
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I don't think it's correct. I'm not quite sure I understand the meaning you want to convey in "his way to be". I guess you meant "his existence". Anyway, I'd say the following:

-Over the years, laughing has become part of his day-to-day life and of his being.

-Over the years, laughing has become part of his day-to-day life and his way of being optimistic.

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Christine Christie

Does this sentence make sense?

"Over the years, laughing has become part of his day-to-day like and of his way to be."

He has a light-hearted and positive approach to life. Humor is the essence of his being, and he laughs frequ

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