Till vs. Until

then do we have to use “until” all the time !!?

No, of course not-- just in formal writing, like business letters or essays.

ok Mr. Mister Micawber , thanks alot , but would you please send me a recorded message just to let me know how to pronounce your name :slight_smile: , thanks again

Sorry, no mike. /mi 'kaw ber/.

thanks Mr. Micawber , you were really helpful ,it would be great to have a teacher just like you :slight_smile:

Thanks. And your English sounds pretty fluent on your MP3.

yea thanks , i am trying to do the best i could :slight_smile:

Hello!
One word don’t go with the verb in bold:The bill /meal /bank account came to 35$.
At the answer key it is said that ‘the bank account’ is the word that don’t go with the verb;Why? I really don’t see why. Could you give me a reason?
Thank you!

A bank account doesn’t ‘come to’ a figure because ‘come to’ here indicates that you have totalled the cost of items to find a final amount which then has to be paid.

Bank accounts don’t work on this principle.
The bill came to - the total cost of items on the bill was…
The meal came to - the total cost of the items ordered from the menu was…

Till vs until
You didn’t ask buy, regarding,“Wich one is OK: Would you tell me what is that, or
Would you tell me what that is,” the first word should be, “Which.” (And while
we are at it, “witch,'” is the creature with the black hat that is seen around Halloween.)

“Till,” and, “until,” are both formal and may be used interchangeably, while, "“til” is less formal and is a contraction of , “until”.
cranberries

Till vs until
You didn’t ask buy, regarding,“Wich one is OK: Would you tell me what is that, or
Would you tell me what that is,” the first word should be, “Which.” (And while
we are at it, “witch,'” is the creature with the black hat that is seen around Halloween.)

“Till,” and, “until,” are both formal and may be used interchangeably, while, "“til” is less formal and is a contraction of , “until”.
cranberries