Question: #8: The preferred word order would be "Business letters are usually written on special forms." #11:. One "quarrels over," not "quarrels on." So answer D is correct.
You are right. Q no 8th's preferred word order would be the same as you've just mentioned; Business letters are usually written on special forms. But the Questions number 11 will remain the same. There isn't any mistake. Reason when we use quarrel over it will take something. structure; Quarrel over + something like; My brother quarreled over money. Or when we use Quarrel with that means someone or something. Structure; Quarrel with + Someone or Something both can be used. For instance, My brother quarreled with my father. We have no quarrel with the people of Spain or of any other country. She had no quarrel with much of what had been said at dinner.
Thank you for your reply. I can see now that my original comments were rather inartfully phrased. What I meant to question was the phrase "to quarrel with someone ON a matter," rather than quarreling with someone OVER a matter. So my answer would have been "with/over."
That's Good wow 😍❣️
Question:
#8: The preferred word order would be "Business letters are usually
written on special forms."
#11:. One "quarrels over," not "quarrels on." So answer D is correct.
You are right. Q no 8th's preferred word order would be the same as you've just mentioned; Business letters are usually written on special forms. But the Questions number 11 will remain the same. There isn't any mistake. Reason when we use quarrel over it will take something. structure; Quarrel over + something like; My brother quarreled over money. Or when we use Quarrel with that means someone or something. Structure; Quarrel with + Someone or Something both can be used. For instance, My brother quarreled with my father.
We have no quarrel with the people of Spain or of any other country.
She had no quarrel with much of what had been said at dinner.
Thank you for your reply. I can see now that my original comments were rather inartfully phrased. What I meant to question was the phrase "to quarrel with someone ON a matter," rather than quarreling with someone OVER a matter. So my answer would have been
"with/over."