Are these sentences correct:
1-Our city is the worst city for bad transportation.
2-Our city is the worst city for transportation.
3-Our city is the best city for good transportation.
4-Our city is the best city for transportation.
They might be grammatically correct, but they don't tell us much.
'Mancaster has the worst transportation system in the UK.'
'Bormungham is the best city for transportation in Alabama - arguably in the entire USA.'
'The worst city in the world for transportation is Spleczinski.'
Rover
'
Thanks a lot Rover.
I did not want to mention a specific city.
Would you say:
a-'The worst city in the world for bad transportation is Spleczinski.'
is correct?
I have just added a "bad" to your last sentence.
The 'bad' is unnecessary - and you have mentioned a specific city.
It's not incorrect, and with more context, it might work:a-'The worst city in the world for bad transportation is Spleczinski.'
The worst city in the world for good transportation is London.
It tries to have an advanced transportation system and has the infrastructure and elements in place, but they are run in a very poor way. However, it's better than the cities that have bad transportation- little or no infrastructure, etc.
Wouldn't the worst city for bad transportation, actually be good? Double negatives.
Thank you all.
What SoothingDave says is the problem I had with the sentence.
A-It is a bad city for transportation.
(This makes sense)
B-It is a bad city for good transportation.
(This makes sense)
C-It is a bad city for bad transportation.
What is this saying? If you want "bad transformation" then it is a bad city?
The problem is that in some other contexts, the same structure makes sense (I think):
D-It is a bad city for bad weather.
Would you say:
E-It is a bad city for weather.