orea5's avatar
orea5

Oct. 5, 2021

0
ice-cream seller

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?"

Corrections

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

orea5's avatar
orea5

Oct. 6, 2021

0

Thank you🙂

ice-cream seller


She's currently serving an apprenticeship with an ice-cream seller.


She's currently servdoing an apprenticeship withat an ice-cream sellerhop.

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 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 in lunch brakes.


She can snack on a pint of ice-cream during lunch breakes.

Apparently, she's saving up her every pay/ pay packet to help her parents pay off a loan.


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?


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

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