Contemporary English: Ago: Typical mistakes: I met her ago three years. I have left school three years ago. I have started working for this firm before three years....
The prepositions 'Across' and 'Over' are used with similar meaning, but there are differences. Both Across and Over can be used to mean 'on or to the other side' of a line, river, road, and so on (position or movement related to things that are 'long and thin'. Examples: They walked across or over the road... See if you can jump over or across the corridor... Her room's just over or across the corridor... They will be over/across the frontier by midnight... Over is used for movements on or above water, but not in water. For example: How long would it take to swim across the river? (Not: ...over the river?) Both Across and Over can mean 'on the other side of' a high barrier (like a hedge, a fence, a wall, a mountain range...), but only Over is used for a movement to the other side of something high. Compare the following: If we can be over/across the fence before sunrise, we have got a chance. When I last saw them, they were climbing ver...
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