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Angliholic Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

you'll be banned from/on the club

If there are many breaches/violations/breakings of the club rules on your part, you'll be banned from/on it.

Are the above samples all right idiomatically? Are all the alternatives proper in the above text? If not, how would you revise them? Thanks.
  

Top answer

If you repeatedly break the club rules, you will be banned. "

  • If you repeatedly break the club rules, you will be banned.
  • "
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4 Answers
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If you repeatedly break the club rules, you will be banned.

(Don't say "from it" - that's competely understood and will be the least natural thing in your sentence.)

If you want the formality of your original construction, then use "violiations."
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Grammar GeekIf you repeatedly break the club rules, you will be banned.

(Don't say "from it" - that's competely understood and will be the least natural thing in your sentence.)

If you want the formality of your original construction, then use "violiations."

Thanks, GG, for the helpful reply.

But does the first part of the
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Like I said, it's quite formal. If you want to use it, then use "violations" of those three word choices.

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