At his option

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Allen165

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"At his option, Mark may stay at our place, go back to his place, or go somewhere else."

Is "at his option" used correctly?

Thank you!
 

BobK

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:up: In some contexts (and the use of a first name suggests that this could be such a context) it may sound a bit pompous. Commonly, in speech, it would be something like 'Mark may stay at our place, go back to his place, or go somewhere else - it's up to him/it's his choice.'

b
 
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