copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
I am lt;in gt; lt;at gt; the shopping mall. | WordReference Forums So if I am inside the mall, for example in a store I better say 'I am in the shopping mall', right? Both "in" and "at" are correct Neither one is better than the other Both are said very often In general AE speakers use "at" for a "location", and "in" for "inside" something (in a building, in a town, in a city) But some things are both
Im going to go shopping at the mall to the mall I would probably adapt (4) to say "I'm going shopping at the mall" Of the others, (1) works, but not (2) (3) would sound more idiomatic to me as something like "I'm going to the mall to shop for some new shoes"
Mall vs Shopping centre in BrE - WordReference Forums A mall is a collection of stores within a gallery which is usually covered and often completely enclosed and air-conditioned But is this distinction also true in BrE? In American English, what you are calling a "shopping center" is a strip mall It is also called, according to that Wikipedia entry, "a shopping plaza, shopping center, or mini
Shopping center Shopping mall - WordReference Forums Springfield Mall, Ballston Common Mall, and Fair Oaks Mall are all enclosed collections of stores; so is White Flint Mall,, which describes itself as a "regional mall shopping center " Where I grew up, we shopped at an enclosed "mall" called "Colonie Center
Do you want to crash the mall - WordReference Forums sound shift is correct The expression is a variant of the older, "Do you want to crash the party?", i e , "Do you want to go to the party?", except this expression implies that the speaker was not invited to the party but is going to go anyway