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Jul 7, 2014 · Korean. Jul 7, 2014. #1. We say "I'm in " the kitchen" not "I'm at " the kitchen unless you mean a restaurant named "the Kitchen." But suppose I work at a big cafeteria, where people are assigned to different places of the cafeteria--the hall, the patio, the kitchen, the bakery, the storage area, etc. In that case, shouldn't I say, "I'm at the ...
Aug 10, 2014 · 1. The salary and the standard of living is are . . . 2. There is are a kitchen, a bathroom, and a living room . . . 3. There is are a kitchen, a bathroom, and three living rooms . . . The subject (which includes everything that's mentioned) is plural in all of these; you therefore need the plural verb are in all.
Oct 29, 2007 · But I don't see "a kitchen, living room and toyroom" as such a fixed item. In fact the omission of the second and third articles, combined with the singular "is" , might even lead to ambiguity. I could well imagine it referring to a small one-up/one-down house, where the room on the ground floor is " a kitchen, living room and toyroom".
May 9, 2007 · Los Angeles, California. English, USA. Oct 23, 2015. #12. They are, but they are not typical in American English. It would be "at", not "in" if someone was asking you from a distance by text. "At" is the general word unless there is some specific reason to indicate you are inside the restaurant.
Jul 7, 2014 · Forero said: If you want to include the other leads, try this: 2'. There are two doors, of which one leads to the living room and the other leads to the kitchen. "One of which the other leads to the kitchen" does not make sense, but sentence 1, without the comma, makes sense because it is a shortening of: 1'.
Jul 25, 2021 · English - England. Jul 26, 2021. #15. In broad terms: How much fruit is there in the kitchen? - (items classed as "fruit") There is about 3 kilos. How many fruit are there in the kitchen? - (types of fruit) Three: apples, pears and bananas. How many fruits are there in the kitchen - (individual fruit) Ten - three apples, two pears and five bananas.
Feb 19, 2018 · italian (northern) Feb 18, 2018. #1. Hello, I wonder which phrase is fine. context: I ask for a job in a restaurant's kitchen and with experience I mean doing practice: I'm eager to do experience with your team. I'm eager to make experience with your team. suggestions?
Jan 26, 2021 · JulianStuart said: Just to add: that bar/counter does not have legs so it can't be called a table. I agree. But some bars have "bar-height" tables. In the image below, on the left is a "bar-height table", and to the right is the "bar". The actual bar has plumbing: A sink, beer taps, ice bin, soda taps, etc. P.
Jun 21, 2015 · Dublin. Ireland/English. Apr 21, 2007. #5. In British English: Cafeteria is a self-service restaurant. Canteen is a restaurant (usually cheaper) in a factory or office or military base but necessarily so. Dining Hall is where meals are served, say in a collage. There might be no choice or menu - you eat what you are given.
Mar 4, 2014 · (in the kitchen with a pile of dishes) A: I hate washing (the) dishes. B: You can say that again. In my opinion, this one would work better without "the." A is saying "I hate washing dishes. I hate it every time I do it." The other two examples, I agree, work better with "the."