Oct. 5, 2021
She's currently serving an apprenticeship with an ice-cream seller. Her work/job basically consists in scooping ice-cream into scone or bowl waffles, cleaning the counter and refilling the containers with missing ice-cream flavours. She can snack on a pint of ice-cream in lunch brakes. Apparently, she's saving up her every pay/ pay packet to help her parents pay off a loan.
Are both work and job suitable in the first line?
Is it correct to say : "save up pay/ salary/wages for sth?"
She's currently servdoing an apprenticeship withat an ice-cream sellerhop.
Her work/job basically consists inof scooping ice-cream into scone or bowl waffles, cleaning the counter and refilling the containers with missing ice-cream flavours.
She can snack on a pint of ice-cream during lunch breakes.
Apparently, she's saving up her every pay/ pay packetcheck to help her parents pay off a loan.
Are both work and job suitable in the first line?
Job is more common, but both are fine
Is it correct to say : "save up pay/ salary/wages for sth?"
usually we simply say that we are saving up for something
ice-cream seller |
She's currently serving an apprenticeship with an ice-cream seller. She's currently |
Her work/job basically consists in scooping ice-cream into scone or bowl waffles, cleaning the counter and refilling the containers with missing ice-cream flavours. Her |
She can snack on a pint of ice-cream in lunch brakes. She can snack on a pint of ice-cream during lunch break |
Apparently, she's saving up her every pay/ pay packet to help her parents pay off a loan. Apparently, she's saving |
Are both work and job suitable in the first line? Are both work and job suitable in the first line? Job is more common, but both are fine |
Is it correct to say : "save up pay/ salary/wages for sth?" Is it correct to say : "save up pay/ salary/wages for sth?" usually we simply say that we are saving up for something |
You need LangCorrect Premium to access this feature.
Go Premium