Hi Mortar,
28.07.2025 18:26:10, Mortar M. wrote:
But before they sat down to table, the doctor said in a voice of
1) You don't start a sentence with words like "but" and "and".
But why shouldn't I? And could it be you made up this "rule" yourself
just now? :-)
2) It would be more appropriate to say, "But before they sat down
to eat," or just, "But before they sat down,", implying that
they were sitting down to dinner.
I can see an excuse to say "to sit down to table", the same way you
would say "I'm back in town" or "He's back from school". Although some
weird cases of not putting an article where it apparently should be do
happen, like in the following sentence (it's from a police report):
"...Robert Nastek was heading north on Olney Laytonsville
Road when he saw Kevin Costlow beating on the hood of car
occupied by Asian females".
Shouldn't it be "beating on the hood of -a- car"?
--
"I'll be more enthusiastic about encouraging thinking outside the
box when there's evidence of any thinking going on inside it."
-- Terry Pratchett
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