Need to do some digging.

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Ashraful Haque

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I was talking to someone about IELTS and he told me the following:
"Since you're taking the test soon you nee to do some digging and find out about it as much as possible."

Since he's a non-native speaker I found 'do some digging' in this context odd. I've heard this phrase in movies/shows where the police are trying to find of clues about someone.

- Is 'do some digging' correct in this context?
- What does it actually mean?
 

GoesStation

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It's natural and correct. It means "study the situation". In this case, your friend wants you to learn more about the IELTS exam.
 

Ashraful Haque

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It's natural and correct. It means "study the situation". In this case, your friend wants you to learn more about the IELTS exam.
I see. Does these scenario make sense?

Scenario 1:
A: Have you started the assignment yet?
B: No. I need to do some more digging.

Scenario 2:
Paparazzo 1: You sure Dwayne Johnson and Shah Rukh khan are dating each other?
Paparazzo 2: Let me do some more digging about this before publishing the news.
 

GoesStation

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I see. Does these scenario make sense?

Scenario 1:
A: Have you started the assignment yet?
B: No. I need to do some more digging.

Scenario 2:
Paparazzo 1: You sure Dwayne Johnson and Shah Rukh khan are dating each other?
Paparazzo 2: Let me do some more digging about this before publishing the news.
The examples are okay. I think you understand the idiom.

I've underlined a serious grammatical error. Can you fix it?
 
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Ashraful Haque

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The examples are okay. I think you understand the idiom.

I've underlined a serious grammatical error. Can you fix it?
Of course I can, it should be 'do these.' It happened because at first I was thinking about just one example and then I thought lets think of another one but then forgot to change the 'does' to 'do.' :)
 

emsr2d2

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Of course I can; it should be 'do these'. It happened because at first I was thinking about just one example and then I thought "Let's think of another one" but then forgot to change the 'does' to 'do.' :)

Note my corrections above. Your opening sentence contained a comma splice. You needed either a semi-colon (as shown above) or two separate sentences. Thoughts should be quoted in the same way as direct speech.
 

GoesStation

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I see. Does these scenario make sense?l

Of course I can, it should be 'do these.' It happened because at first I was thinking about just one example and then I thought lets think of another one but then forgot to change the 'does' to 'do.' :)
You forgot to change something else when you decided to discuss more than one scenario. Do you see the error above?
 

Ashraful Haque

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You forgot to change something else when you decided to discuss more than one scenario. Do you see the error above?


Yes. The 's' in scenarios.
 
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