what is the difference beetwen seat and room

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,

  1. Jump in the car there’s enough room for you.
  2. 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.