- Will travel vs. will be travelling | WordReference Forums
In an hour's time, I home on the train a will travel b will be travelling This is an exam question, but I think it's a foolish one since both
- go lt;traveling gt; lt;to travel gt; | WordReference Forums
I want to suggest my friends a trip How should I say it? A) Let's go traveling B) Let's go to travel
- Is it correct to say Im travelling in this context?
Let's say I've arrived at an American Airport and I intend to stay for a week for tourism If the Customs officer asks what the purpose of my visit is, is it okay to answer " I'm traveling", even though it is a short trip and I might just visit a few cities? If this sounds a little off, what
- I was am will be traveling to Paris next week. [tense?]
Next week is an expression like tomorrow, always in the future, so was traveling does not fit at all Am traveling is possible, but will be traveling is clearer Would be traveling is another possibility and, if my plans have changed since I called my friends, it may be most appropriate
- Im on travel Im on traveling - WordReference Forums
Hello, Today, a friend of mine sent me a text message and asked: "Where are you? I want to meet you at your home" I said: I'm on travel I'm on traveling (Meaning I'm on the bus, going to another city, to attend an important meeting ) Is the underlined part idiomatic? Thanks a lot
- Traveling on for business - WordReference Forums
At least in American English, both traveling on business and traveling for business are possible and idiomatic I certainly use both, though I think I use traveling for business more often
- Go travelling travel | WordReference Forums
Hello, everyone! Is there any difference between go travelling and travel? One more thing, are the following sentences correct? I will travel to London I will go travelling in London Thanks :)
- travel down vs travel | WordReference Forums
People typically "travel down" a road, a path, a river, etc This is a set phrase If you describe someone as "traveling down from [somewhere]", the assumption is that the person either traveled from a higher place to a lower place, or that he she traveled in a southerly direction (i e down on a map)
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