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Kenta Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Would you correct my English? (Mar.31)

Hello. I wrote two dialogues. Will you correct them?

No. 1

M: The office furniture was rearranged. How do you like [ What about ] the new office

layout?

F: I love it. But you don't look happy, do you?

M: Well...I feel more comfortable in untidy rooms.

No. 2

M: Did you know that I'll quit [ be leaving ] the company this month?

F: Really? What are you going to do after that?

M: I'm going back to school to study education. I've wanted to teach

children.

Thank you. kenta
  

Top answer

Kenta Hello. I wrote two dialogues. Will you correct them?

  • Kenta Hello.
  • I wrote two dialogues.
  • Will you correct them?
  • No.
  • 1 M: The office furniture was rearranged.
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3 Answers
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KentaHello. I wrote two dialogues. Will you correct them?

No. 1

M: The office furniture was rearranged. How do you like [ What about ] the new office

layout?
F: I love it. But you don't look happy., do you? M won't know whether he looks happy

M: Well...I feel more comfortable in untidy rooms.

No.
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Thank you, KateJS. Your explanation is very easy to understand.

I have a question.

You wrote.

M: Did you know that I'll quit be leaving the company this month? (or I'm leaving)

Is the expresstion "quit the company" strange?

I can find this expression in dictionaries.

kenta
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I don't know about US usage, but in the UK we might say "I'm quitting this month." It would be understood that it was our current job/company that we were quitting, because we only tend to use the verb 'to quit' in this context, so we wouldn't say "...quit the company...". It would still be more common here to say "I'm leaving..." or "I'll be leaving..."

In any case we would use the pre

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