Mohegansunarenapacom Announces The Upcoming Concert Lineup

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How can the answer in the following test question be "it"? Mr. Akagi was unable to buy tickets for the concert because it/they was sold out.

I know the codes to the application. I have two tickets to the concert. W for X can be used to identify something W that leads to the main purpose or enablement of X. If you buy tickets in order to have access to the concert, saying "these tickets are for the concert" is valid. W of X means several things, none of which work with ticket and ...

word choice - Should I use tickets "of", "for" or "to" a concert ...

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As a native English speaker, I would say, “I’m sorry to miss your concert,” to talk about a future event, and I find this fully grammatical. Also, “Sorry I’m missing your concert,” which feels slightly more casual.

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What is the difference between "I am sorry to miss your concert" & "I ...

As above, it is never correct to say "on the concert". There's also a special idiom, "in concert," used to indicate that a person is performing: Come see Paul McCartney in concert this Tuesday at Center Stage! I saw the Beatles in concert 40 years ago. Here, "in concert" is used as if it were the opposite of "in a recording".

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Concert starts at 6PM sharp! Bring your friends! On the other hand, a safety bulletin might use future tense because it is meant to be conveyed as a matter of fact, and without emotion: The concert will start at 6PM. We will make an announcement at 5:50PM informing the attendants of all the fire exits.

He couldn't have known about the break-in, since he was on vacation in Tahiti at the time—unless a neighbor sent him a text when they saw his garage door open. We'll miss the concert if we don't hurry—unless you're willing to share the cost of a taxi.

We would say "I'm at the meeting" or "I'm at the concert" for the same reason. MyGrammarLab Intermediate by M.Foley and D.Hall explains it a bit differently though: To support my "event" idea, I'd like to refer to English Grammar in Use by R.Murphy: Here are a few examples like that with "at" + event: Both my friends are at the lecture.

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We'd only say "the school" to refer specifically to the building, for example " the concert is at the school " would be idiomatic because it is a special event happening at the same building where schooling takes place but is not the building's primary purpose of 'schooling'. "The office" is not one of those 'institutions' I mentioned earlier.

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