Free B with every A.
BOGOF is sometimes used for Buy one get one free.
Thanks everyone! But is there any way to say the meaning that you spend money to buy A, in return, you can get A + B, and show that B is bigger?
I make up one "Buy a Big Deal"
Is this expression sensible?
Many thanks!!
No, it isn't.
The "free gift with purchase" is not normally "bigger" than the original item purchased.
I could see buying a coat and getting free gloves. Or buying a chainsaw and getting a case for it for free.
But not buying a set of tires and getting a free car.
It's as grammatically correct as 'drink a big rifle'. There is little point in discussing the grammatical correctness of sentences that have no meaning.So or I should ask if "Buy a Big Deal" is gramatically correct?