TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Dec. 20, 2025

0
Do you have a favorite amusement park?

My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland, because it has great rides, great stuff, and great atmosphere. However, an entrance fee has been increasing in for years, and there is no annual pass anymore. One day. I’d like to go to there with my child.

Corrections (5)
Correction Settings
Choose how corrections are organized

Only show inserted text
Word-level diffs are planned for a future update.

TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Dec. 21, 2025

0

Do you have a favorite amusement park?

TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Dec. 21, 2025

0

Do you have a favorite amusement park?

I’d like to go to there with my child.

TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Dec. 21, 2025

0

Liag's avatar
Liag

Dec. 20, 2025

2
Liag's avatar
Liag

Dec. 20, 2025

2
TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Dec. 21, 2025

0
Liag's avatar
Liag

Dec. 21, 2025

2

Do you have a favorite amusement park?

One day.

I’d like to go to there with my child.

TOMO_o's avatar
TOMO_o

Dec. 21, 2025

0
Lionel's avatar
Lionel

Dec. 21, 2025

0

Do you have a favorite amusement park?


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland, because it has great rides, great stuff, and great atmosphere.


My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland, because it has great rides, great stuff, and great atmosphere. My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland, because it has great rides, great stuff, and great atmosphere.

While there is nothing wrong, stuff is a very general word for anything. It is not common to list it alongside specific things like rides or atmosphere. But you may use it like "etc." at the end. For example, "it has great rides, atmosphere, and stuff." This implies there are other things but you do not want to list them all.

My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland, because it has great rides, great [stuff], and great atmosphere. My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland, because it has great rides, great [stuff], and great atmosphere.

stuff = is too general for this context. We don't know if you mean souvenirs, food and drinks, or something else.

My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland, because it has great rides, great stuff, and great atmosphere. My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland, because it has great rides, great stuff, and great atmosphere.

I don't have an actual correction here because the sentence is correct, but "great stuff" is a bit ambiguous. "Stuff" is a very generic word in the English language. The reader will want more detail. What kind of stuff?

My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland, because it has great rides, great stuff, and a great atmosphere. My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland, because it has great rides, great stuff and a great atmosphere.

My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland, because it has great rides, great stuff, and great atmosphere. My favorite amusement park is definitely Disneyland because it has great rides, great stuff, and great atmosphere.

However, an entrance fee has been increasing in for years, and there is no annual pass anymore.


However, anthe entrance fee has been increasing in forrecent years, and there is no annual pass anymore. However, the entrance fee has been increasing in recent years, and there is no annual pass anymore.

When you use "an" it feels like you have no particular entrance fee in mind, like some random entrance fee somewhere is being increased. "The" will link the entrance fee to the context you are currently talking about, so readers will know it is referring to Disneyland's.

However, anthe entrance fee has been increasing in for years, and there is no annual pass anymore. However, the entrance fee has been increasing in for years, and there is no annual pass anymore.

It's the fee for the park. It is specific to Disneyland.

However, anthe entrance fee has been increasing in for years, and there is not an annual pass anymore. However, the entrance fee has been increasing in for years, and there is not an annual pass anymore.

You're referring specifically to the entrance fee at Disneyland, so "the" works better than "an".

However, anthe entrance fee has been increasing in forover the years, and there is no annual pass anymore. However, the entrance fee has been increasing over the years and there is no annual pass anymore.

However, anthe entrance fee has been increasing in for years, and there is no annual passes anymore. However, the entrance fee has been increasing for years, and there is no annual passes anymore.

One day.


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

One day., One day,

This is part of the next sentence. (The sentence is so short, you might even omit the comma.)

One day., One day,

This should connect to the next sentence with a comma.

One day., One day,

One day. One day

I’d like to go to there with my child.


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

You need LangCorrect Premium to access this feature.

Go Premium