Daily Grammar – Week 8

DAILY GRAMMAR (DG) 22-04-2018

1. You won’t be served if you are not on the line. (No)

You won’t be served if you are not in the line. (Yes)

(To be “in the line” is to join a queue in order to obtain something or gain access at one’s turn. “On the line” is to “touch the line”, meaning not being above or below it. For example, “my old handwriting teacher always insisted that I should write on the line.”)

2. The woman drove her Toyota on first gear for two hours. (No)

The woman drove her Toyota in first gear for two hours. (Yes)

(The right preposition is to drive “in” gear one, two, three, etc., not “on”.)

3. Everyone will leave this world on the long run. (No)

Everyone will leave this world in the long run. (Yes)

(The phrase, “in the long run”, is a fixed expression that means eventually, ultimately, etc.)

Did You Know?

The shortest “-ology” is “oology”, which means the scientific study of eggs, while the longest “-ology” is “otorhinolaryngology”, the branch of medicine that deals with the study and treatment of ear, nose and throat (ENT) disorders.

Can you give more examples of words that end in the suffix, “-ology”, with their meanings?