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Newguest Posted 17 years ago
Vocabulary

Wind cut through

Hi

Are the sentences below correct?

If the wind cuts you through you will get ill.

Don't go outside, the wind will cut you through and you will fall ill.

The wind cut through my clothes and I'm ill now.
  

Top answer

If the wind cuts through you, you'll get sick . Don't go outside : the wind'll cut through you , and you'll fall ill. The wind cut through my clothes , and now I'm ill.

  • If the wind cuts through you, you'll get sick .
  • Don't go outside : the wind'll cut through you , and you'll fall ill.
  • The wind cut through my clothes , and now I'm ill.
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3 Answers
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If the wind cuts through you, you'll get sick.
Don't go outside: the wind'll cut through you, and you'll fall ill.
The wind cut through my clothes, and now I'm ill.
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Hi Mister Micawber

I don't use abbreviations too often even when I speak, I just feel it's more difficult to me, especially if I had to say: ... the wind'll cut through ....

By the way: I didn't change any settings in my profile but I stopped receving email notifications. How can I fix it?
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Native speakers always use contractions when they speak conversationally, Newguest.

Re emails: your Profile settings seem fine to me; if the problems continues, please contact Ruslana or Punkybrewster.

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