I was there with my family and we were with a tour and this was back in the 90's.

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B45

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My son writes in a report:

I was there with my family and we were with a tour and this was back in the 90's.

VS

I was there with my family on a tour and this was back in the 90's.

Are both okay? What would a native say?
 

emsr2d2

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The first is very long-winded and it has too many "and"s. It would be perfectly reasonable to hear a native speaker say it because we generally don't think ahead when we talk. We start a sentence and then we just keep adding to it!

In writing though, I would use "I went there on a tour with my family back in the 90s".
 
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B45

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The first is very long-winded and it has too many "and"s. It would be perfectly reasonable to hear a native speaker say it because we generally don't think ahead when we talk. We start a sentence and then we just keep adding to it!

In writing though, I would use "I went there on a tour with my family back in the 90s".

So - I was there with my family on a tour - is wrong.
 

Boris Tatarenko

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Not a teacher nor a native speaker.

There's nothing wrong with your sentence. The question is would native speakers say it? ;-)
 
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B45

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Not a teacher nor a native speaker.

There's nothing wrong with your sentence. The question is would native speakers say it? ;-)

I was there with my family on a tour is the exact opposite of emsr2d2 suggested, so I just want to be sure.
 

emsr2d2

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W​hy do you think my version is the exact opposite of yours? Are you solely referring to the word order of "on a tour" and "with my family"?
 
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B45

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W​hey do you think my version is the exact opposite of yours? Are you solely referring to the word order of "on a tour" and "with my family"?

Yes, the word order is opposite from your suggestions.
 

Tdol

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Your word order is not wrong, but it sounds better to me the way emsr2d2 said it.
 
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