Aug 24, 2001 06:54
23 yrs ago
English term
At the form of Cheque or Cash
English
Bus/Financial
Finance (general)
Is it correct?
1. At the form of cheque / cash
2. In the form of cheque / cash
What is the correct sentence, moreover, when we use at and in?
1. At the form of cheque / cash
2. In the form of cheque / cash
What is the correct sentence, moreover, when we use at and in?
Responses
0 +2 | In the form of cheque/cash | Kateabc |
0 +1 | in cash or by check (cheque). | Fuad Yahya |
Change log
Feb 7, 2006 05:16: Fuad Yahya changed "Field" from "Marketing" to "Bus/Financial" , "Field (specific)" from "(none)" to "Finance (general)"
Feb 7, 2006 05:16: Fuad Yahya changed "Level" from "Non-PRO" to "PRO"
Responses
+2
6 mins
Selected
In the form of cheque/cash
When we speak of payments being made, we use the preposition "in" - ie. Payment must be made in cash or cheque.
Native English speaker
Good luck!
Native English speaker
Good luck!
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Graded automatically based on peer agreement. KudoZ."
+1
9 hrs
in cash or by check (cheque).
Many aspects of human languages are irritatingly arbitrary. Perhaps no aspect is more arbitrary than the choice of preposition. This example clearly demonstrates this point. We say, "in cash," but "by check" (or "cheque") and "by money order." There is no need for "the form of."
Fuad
Fuad
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