Is long distance call charge by minute of flat rate.

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Jit833

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1) The car in front of me had to do a sudden stop and caused me to jam my brake.
2) The car in front of me stopped suddenly and caused me to jam on my brake.
3) The snow melt away very fast.(can I say melt away?).
4) Is long distance call charge by minute of flat rate?
5) My stopped in time to avoid collision.


Can somebody tell me if the the above sentences are correct? If no, can somebody teach me how to rewrite it. Thanks
 
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emsr2d2

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They all have at least one error. Look at your verbs, your tenses and, in one case, an omitted word. #2 needs the least work. #4 needs the most work.
 

Jit833

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They all have at least one error. Look at your verbs, your tenses and, in one case, an omitted word. #2 needs the least work. #4 needs the most work.


Thanks for replying. I have made some correction to the sentences as follow.

1) The car in front if me made a sudden stop and caused me to jam on my brake.2) The car in front of me had to stop suddenly and caused me to jam on my brake.
3) The snow melt away quickly.(can I say melt away?).
4) Is long distance call charge by minute or by flat rate?
5) My car stop in time to avoid collision.


I hope I get it right this time. :)
 

bhaisahab

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Thanks for replying. I have made some correction to the sentences as follow.

1) The car in front if me made a sudden stop and caused me to jam on my brake.2) The car in front of me had to stop suddenly and caused me to jam on my brake.
3) The snow melt away quickly.(can I say melt away?).
4) Is long distance call charge by minute or by flat rate?
5) My car stop in time to avoid collision.


I hope I get it right this time. :)

No, try again.
 

emsr2d2

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Here's a clue for 1 and 2. We don't use "jam my brake".
 

Jit833

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Here's a clue for 1 and 2. We don't use "jam my brake".

Thanks again for replying. I have made some changes to sentence 1 and 2.



1) The car in front of me made a sudden stop and caused me to slam on the brake.
2) The car in front of me had to stop suddenly and caused me to slam on the brake.


I hope they are coreect this time. What about the other sentences, did I phrase them correctly? :)
 

emsr2d2

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Thanks again for replying. I have made some changes to sentence 1 and 2.



1) The car in front of me made a sudden stop and caused me to slam on the brakes.
2) The car in front of me had to stop suddenly and caused me to slam on the brakes.


I hope they are coreect this time. What about the other sentences, did I phrase them correctly? :)

Much better! As you can see above, we usually say "brakes" when using the noun.

So - question 3 - look at your tense. If you want to use the present tense, you have got the form wrong. It seems more likely to me that you would use the past tense in which case "melt" is wrong.
 

Rover_KE

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You have the wrong tense in #5 as well.

Can you see how muddled a thread gets when you ask a number of unrelated questions?

In future please ask separate questions in separate threads.

Rover
 

emsr2d2

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You have the wrong tense in #5 as well.

Can you see how muddled a thread gets when you ask a number of unrelated questions?

In future please ask separate questions in separate threads.

Rover

That's why I was trying to deal with them one at a time, in numerical order. ;-)
 

Jit833

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That's why I was trying to deal with them one at a time, in numerical order. ;-)


Thanks for replying. I apologize for the inconvenience and confusion that I've caused.
I have made some changes to sentence 5 as following:

1) My car stopped in time to avoid collision.
 

emsr2d2

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Thanks for replying. I apologize for the inconvenience and confusion that I've caused.
I have made some changes to sentence 5 as following:

1) My car stopped in time to avoid collision.

So much for numerical order. OK, 5 is now fine. What about 3 and 4?
 

Rover_KE

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Thanks for replying. I apologize for the inconvenience and confusion that I've caused.
I have made some changes to sentence 5 as following:

1) My car stopped in time to avoid collision.

You've not only changed the wording - you've changed its number.

5) My car stopped in time to avoid a collision.

I'm closing this thread. Please ask about the other sentences in separate posts.

Rover
 
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