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Victorycountry Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

Where do you go to ...

0Hi,02br
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00If someone asks me "where do you go to company"?, can I respond to the question with "I go to (say) Samsung."02br
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00Other examples.02br
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001) Where do you go to school? => I go to Auckland University.02br
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002) Where do you go to church? => I go to the St.Johnson Church.02br
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00Thanks in advance.0-
  

Top answer

', with the answer being 'I work at Samsun'. Some might answer, however, 'I work in Inchon'. '02br 0-

  • ', with the answer being 'I work at Samsun'.
  • Some might answer, however, 'I work in Inchon'.
  • '02br 0-
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3 Answers
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0 Of the three questions, only 1 and 2 are natural-- and you have given natural answers.02br
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00 The third question should be 'where do you work?', with the answer being 'I work at Samsun'. Some might answer, however, 'I work in Inchon'. If that happens, the questions should be re-phrased as 'who do you work for?'02br
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0Hi, Mr. MM02br
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00Thanks for your help!02br
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00I was wondered whether you could ask such a way, because such a question (where do you go to company?) was on an English-Learning book, and I'd never heard such a question before. So I thought it might be an American way of saying.0-
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0 Nope, this one sounds strange even to American ears. 0-

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