BraLoD said:
It's not " I was agree", it's " I was right". When you say agree you must be relating to something someone else said, not something you said. Example, if someone said it was expected to happen and you think the same, then you can say " I agree" (without the was in the middle). But if you are refering to something you,said, like now as you expected a drop, then you,should use " I was right". Also you keep using the past form of drop, dropped, when you should not, as you did again now. "prepare for 40 to 60% dropped all console", you should say "prepare for a 40 to 60% drop in all consoles", because if you say dropped, you must be refering to something that already happened, as you are using a past tense, like " in March all consoles dropped compared to February". Hope you don't mind it, but as a fellow outsider to the english language I think you would appreciate to keep improving on it. You were doing this same mistakes a lot lately and I don't want it to become a common mistake to you as you thought it was right. |
Ok, thanks for the advice.