What is the difference beetwen “seat and room”?
Jump in the car there’s enough …for you
A)room
B)seat
In this context:
room - physical space
seat - something to sit on
(‘room’ is the correct answer)
Beeesneees,
- Jump in the car there’s enough room for you.
- Jump into the car there’s enough room for you.
Which sentence is more appropriate?
Both are accepted; you need a semicolon after car, though.
SteveThomas,
Do I need to put semicolon for both sentences?
SteveThomas,
Do I need to put semicolon for both sentences?
In each example, you have two sentences jammed together.You could put a period there instead, and capitalize “there’s” but a semicolon is a lirtte better.
Instead of “Do I need to put semicolon for both sentences?”, you should write “Do I need to put a semicolon in each sentence?”
It must take a lot of courage to ask questions here, with people correcting your questions as well as your examples. I salute everyone for that. And a lot of the questions are things that many native speakers get wrong. Not to mention the differences between the USA and UKGBNI versions of the language.