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  1. 2 de fev. de 2009 · Hello, Here's the context: a new committee has been created in a company. A consultant is invited to provide a one-day training (for the members of the committee) in/on the missions and operation of the committee. Could you please tell me which preposition is right? Many thanks!

  2. 15 de mar. de 2010 · "Get onto the train" does not sound natural to me if you mean a passenger and a passenger train. "Get on the train" does. "Get onto the train" might be OK to describe what a hobo does to board a freight train. "Get on the train" would work here as well, however. Edit: I have found many examples using "onto" using a book search, so I'm wrong.

  3. 8 de fev. de 2022 · In my assignment, i was asked to choose the correct sentence and did not score any marks when i chose the one with "What time is the train leaving" ? What time is the train leaving ?-incorrect And the quiz says the correct one is--- >When does the train leave? I am still wondering why my answer was incorrect.Pls help.

  4. 24 de out. de 2010 · I'm going to take a train. Why are you in such a hurry? I've got a train to catch! You can 'pick up a train' but it is a relatively rare usage. I would use it to describe part of an ongoing journey. For example: I'm taking a bus from London to Paris, then I pick up a train that takes me to Rome. After that, I fly to Sicily and arrive on Tuesday.

  5. 17 de jan. de 2024 · A train is not your buddy that you travel with. - He left by (way of) the 10 o'clock train. That was the method he used to leave. It sounds sort of literary to me and not like something you'd say in conversation but you might read in a book as part of a story.

  6. 27 de out. de 2018 · "Run a train" is a wholly different phrase and to my knowledge specifically describes intercourse between one female and multiple male partners in a single session.. Be very wary of Urban Dictionary. One rule of thumb: The longer the definition, the more you should be suspicious of it. Look at the average dictionary and its usually very brief ...

  7. 30 de mai. de 2016 · Choo, chug and chuff are onomatopoeic words for the sound a steam train makes. In BE, choo-choo and (less commonly) chuff-chuff are onomatopoeic words for "train" (or more specifically, the engine) - they are used when speaking to very young children and thus, by very young children. I can't think of any with a k sound in them.

  8. 22 de nov. de 2011 · Hello! Which is correct? What time does your train leave/ will your train leave tomorrow? I guess it's the first variant, but I can't find an explanation why?? Thanks!

  9. 19 de out. de 2009 · In the case of catching the train, both "in time" and "on time" are fine. The first implies that you arrived with enough time to catch the train, while the second implies that you got there before or at the time the train was scheduled to depart. In most cases this is the same thing, but you can see a subtle difference:

  10. 28 de jan. de 2015 · I believe the usual announcement is "The train now arriving at Platform 3 is . . . ". They could say " . . . on Platform 3 is . . . ", and it would mean the same thing. If they were to talk about the train 'approaching', they would say "The train approaching Platform 3" (with no preposition). This is true of the UK, It could be different elsewhere.

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