[Grammar] In spite of using to hate Math, I never failed a year.

Status
Not open for further replies.

beachboy

Key Member
Joined
Jan 13, 2008
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
Portuguese
Home Country
Brazil
Current Location
Brazil
Although I used to hate Math, I never failed a year.


I have two questions:

1 - Instead of saying Although I used to hate Math, can I say In spite of using to hate Math, I never failed a year? I've never seen it, it sounds awkward....
2 - Is it right to say "I never failed a year"? How can I say it properly?
 
"Math" ("maths" in British English) is not a proper noun. It should be capitalized only when it's the first word of a sentence.
 
I see. And what about failing a year? Is it correct?
 
If you have an end-of-year exam every year in the subject, yes.
 
And if I fail this end-of-the-year exam, can I say that I'll have to "repeat the year"? How can I say it properly?
 
I believe that's the correct term, yes. However, I don't know if failing just the maths exam would mean that you had to repeat the entire year in every subject. In the UK, that's not how it works. If a child has to repeat a year, they have to join all the students a year younger than them and study all their classes with those people. They can't just repeat maths, for example, but continue with their other subjects as planned.
 
It used to be like this in Brazil. At least, when I was a student, hundreds of years ago. Not sure about how it works nowadays, I'd have to check it out. By the way, I never had to repeat the year. Just for the record. ;-)
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top