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  • Will travel vs. will be travelling - WordReference Forums
    a will travel b will be travelling This is an exam question, but I think it's a foolish one since both choices are correct There is only a subtle difference: "Will travel" refers to the starting point which is "after an hour from now" "Will be travelling" suggests that the action will be in progress Am I right?! Thanks!!
  • In travelling On travelling - WordReference Forums
    Hi, Someone is calling me I should say I am on in travelling Which preposition is correct Thank you
  • Travelling Traveling - WordReference Forums
    Travelling is a Canadian spelling and British I believe, whereas traveling is American
  • I will be travelling home - WordReference Forums
    Hi everyone, I need help with the following sentence: "This Saturday I will be travelling home and I will be available for a meeting starting next Monday" Is it correct to use "will" twice? Thank you!
  • Go travelling travel - WordReference Forums
    Hello, everyone! Is there any difference between go travelling and travel? One more thing, are the following sentences correct? I will travel to London I will go travelling in London Thanks :)
  • I’m travelling travel a lot these days | WordReference Forums
    These sentences both seem grammatical to me, but I’m wondering if there is any difference in meaning: 1 I’m travelling a lot these days 2 I travel a lot these days I think the first sentence seems to convey that travelling a lot is a temporary situation for me but the second sentence does
  • Im on travel Im on traveling | WordReference Forums
    Hello, Today, a friend of mine sent me a text message and asked: "Where are you? I want to meet you at your home" I said: I'm on travel I'm on traveling (Meaning I'm on the bus, going to another city, to attend an important meeting ) Is the underlined part idiomatic? Thanks a lot
  • Traveling on for business - WordReference Forums
    If your work has you driving around the city (visiting various customers, for example), we don't call that "travelling on business" or a "business trip" (which mean the same) Both those terms imply a longer distance: usually an airplane flight, nowadays Hundreds or thousands of miles


















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