A guy was using the treadmill in the gym and I waited for him to stop using it so that I can use it.

tufguy

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Do we say "someone comes down of a treadmill" or " someone stops using a treadmill"? For example:

1) A guy was using the treadmill in the gym and I waited for him to stop using it so that I can use it.
2) A guy was using the treadmill in the gym and I waited for him to come down of it so that I can use it.
 
@tufguy

1. Are you confusing of with off?

2, Someone might conceivably use "come down off a treadmill" although that wouldn't be quite natural. A native speaker would probably say just "get off' rather than "come down off".
 
I would just say I waited until the other guy was finished. Why complicate things?
 
... the other guy got off is hardly more complicated than ... the other guy was finished.
 
You are entitled to your opinion.
 
Do we say "someone comes down off a treadmill" or "someone stops using a treadmill"? For example:

1) A guy was using the treadmill in the gym and I waited for him to stop using it so that I can could use it.
2) A guy was using the treadmill in the gym and I waited for him to come down off it so that I can could use it.
Sentence 1 is OK.
Sentence 2 is unnatural. We don't say "come down off a treadmill".

I'd say "I waited for him to get off [it] so that ...".
 
A side-issue: when describing a past event you would say ".... so that I could use it."
 
A side-issue: when describing a past event you would say ".... so that I could use it."
I made that correction in the quote box in post #6. Make sure you read all other responses before writing your own - it keeps threads as short as possible. Thanks!
 
So many ads its painful to scroll through and read. I'm probably going to bail.
 
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