Asked by rfvv
1. He is standing at the back of the shop.
2. He is standing behind the shop.
3. He is standing in back of the shop.
4. He is standing in the back of the shop.
5. He is standing at back of the shop.
(Are they all grammatical? Which one is ungrammatical? Do they have the same meaning?)
2. He is standing behind the shop.
3. He is standing in back of the shop.
4. He is standing in the back of the shop.
5. He is standing at back of the shop.
(Are they all grammatical? Which one is ungrammatical? Do they have the same meaning?)
Answers
Answered by
Writeacher
1 - 4 are fine. 5 is not correct.
1 and 4 mean the same thing: He is inside the shop, but standing in the back.
2 and 3 mean the same thing: He is standing outside the back of the shop.
1 and 4 mean the same thing: He is inside the shop, but standing in the back.
2 and 3 mean the same thing: He is standing outside the back of the shop.
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.