English is difficult - so I need help! :)

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This irritated me.
I'm not native by the way.
So I need help.

Which one is correct?
Or is there any difference usage?

a. Work it on America.
b. Work it in America.
c. Work it at America.

The phrase "work it" makes me confuse.
The next thing are:

a. Do it on America.
b. Do it in America.
c. Do it at America.

I need to use them in a simple song lyric.
So it won't be for letter, but for a song.
I know that sometime we can use improper words for a song.
But which one is the perfect?

Thank you very much for any help.
Cheers.-




Post #11:
Originally Posted by superowid View Post

Thank you every one for the reply.

This is going to be used in a jingle song for a website actually.
So the song is telling people about using the service they offer.

The complete lyric of those refrain is like this...

Don't work it alone!
Work it on blablabla.com
Don't do it alone!
Do it on blablabla.com

So, I;m not sure to use "on" or 'in" or "at" for this...
Post #19: Solved!
Originally Posted by superowid View Post

I'm Asian. All I know is basic English. I found I have no problem talking to natives. I even passed my aviation test in USA years ago with excellent result.
But when it comes to writing, the grammar will be my nightmare.

By the way, the owner now is requesting to change it....

Don't work it alone!
Work it with blablabla.com
Don't do it alone!
Do it with blablabla.com

So, whatever he said!
LoL...

And thanks to you all!
Have a great time.

#english #grammar #help a warrior #phrase #words
  • Profile picture of the author Frank Donovan
    Originally Posted by superowid View Post

    Which one is correct?
    Or is there any difference usage?

    a. Work it on America.
    b. Work it in America.
    c. Work it at America.

    The phrase "work it" makes me confuse.
    b. (in America) would be the one to use in that connection. "Work it" isn't a common phrase - but you could say either "work at it" or "work on it" followed by "in America".

    The next thing are:

    a. Do it on America.
    b. Do it in America.
    c. Do it at America.
    Assuming you mean America as the actual country, it would be b. again - "in America".
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  • Profile picture of the author Kay King
    'on America' and 'at America' are wrong


    If you are using the slang 'work it' you could say 'work it in America' and with song lyrics you could get by with that - in conversation it wouldn't make much sense.
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  • Profile picture of the author Odahh
    The context matters



    You might just be better of being perfectly non native

    work it like in America or working it americano style.
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  • Profile picture of the author Jamell
    I like do it in America Better.
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  • Profile picture of the author DWolfe
    Originally Posted by superowid View Post

    This irritated me.
    I'm not native by the way.
    So I need help.

    Which one is correct?
    Or is there any difference usage?


    The phrase "work it" makes me confuse.
    The next thing are:

    a. Do it on America.
    b. Do it in America.
    c. Do it at America.
    Imagine a Travel advertisement for the US. Targeting people in Europe.. Pictures of the Statue of Liberty, The beaches of The Farmlands of the Mid West and the Rocky Mountains. With the title " Traveling this Summer, Do it in America.
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  • Profile picture of the author Monetize
    English is my second language and it's really not that hard.
    Work it has a number of meanings and you can see those
    definitions in a slang dictionary. It seems to me that you
    are more confused about the meanings of on, in, and at.
    Those short little words are all used to describe location
    or position, and if you will learn to use them in a sentence
    you will understand their nuance.
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  • Profile picture of the author Kay King
    English is my second language
    I would not have guessed that from your posts here - your use of the language is so precise...
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    • Profile picture of the author Claude Whitacre
      Originally Posted by Kay King View Post

      I would not have guessed that from your posts here - your use of the language is so precise...

      Same here, I would never have known.

      Quite impressive.
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    • Profile picture of the author Monetize
      Originally Posted by Kay King View Post

      I would not have guessed that from your posts here - your use of the language is so precise...
      Originally Posted by Claude Whitacre View Post

      Same here, I would never have known.

      Quite impressive.

      Oh Thank You!

      I was born in Germany to a German mother and an American
      military father. My mother's family raised me for five years and
      that was my first language.

      My parents brought me to the U.S. when I could not speak hardly
      any English, they enrolled me into school and I had to deal with it.
      It was immersion, that's for sure.

      Children are fast learners so it did not take me long to become
      fluent. I became a citywide Spelling Bee champion, I excelled
      at many subjects, was recommended for advanced placement
      but we moved around so much that never happened.

      I learned more English by watching television than anything else.
      But that was ages ago. Now people tell me I have some sort of
      an accent because I speak a certain proper way, I don't talk like
      the locals even though I've been in Texas nearly fifty years,
      they aren't used to the way I speak, it's just different.

      That whole experience in my childhood made me more resilient,
      stronger and it actually helped me get through difficult times in
      my life. And I still speak German and some Spanish, French
      and the other European languages.
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    • Profile picture of the author Mark Singletary
      Originally Posted by tagiscom View Post

      Go to Google Translate?

      That's one of the worst suggestions I've seen lately. Especially for a non-native speaker who is asking about nuances of a foreign language. Google Translate is sometimes helpful to get the big overall gist of something but not helpful when you are talking about the difference between in and at.

      Mark
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  • Profile picture of the author superowid
    Thank you every one for the reply.

    This is going to be used in a jingle song for a website actually.
    So the song is telling people about using the service they offer.

    The complete lyric of those refrain is like this...

    Don't work it alone!
    Work it on blablabla.com
    Don't do it alone!
    Do it on blablabla.com

    So, I;m not sure to use "on" or 'in" or "at" for this...
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    • Profile picture of the author tagiscom
      Originally Posted by superowid View Post

      Thank you every one for the reply.

      This is going to be used in a jingle song for a website actually.
      So the song is telling people about using the service they offer.

      The complete lyric of those refrain is like this...

      Don't do it alone!
      Do it on blablabla.com

      So, I;m not sure to use "on" or 'in" or "at" for this...
      Ditch the first part, too disjointed.

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  • Profile picture of the author Dan Tran
    b. Work it in America.
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  • Profile picture of the author Kay King
    I've been in Texas nearly fifty years,
    they aren't used to the way I speak, it's just different

    I've had two friends who were German -born - and both spoke English with NO accent. It was the lack of any accent that sometimes set them apart.



    Nobody sounds 'right' to a Texan except another Texan???...and outside Texas they don't 'sound right' either?
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    Saving one dog will not change the world - but the world changes forever for that one dog
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    Live life like someone left the gate open
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    • Profile picture of the author lanfear63
      Originally Posted by Kay King View Post

      I've had two friends who were German -born - and both spoke English with NO accent. It was the lack of any accent that sometimes set them apart.



      Nobody sounds 'right' to a Texan except another Texan???...and outside Texas they don't 'sound right' either?
      Texan's first guess (always) to my accent is Australian.
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      Feel The Power Of The Mark Side

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    • Profile picture of the author Odahh
      Originally Posted by Kay King View Post

      I've had two friends who were German -born - and both spoke English with NO accent. It was the lack of any accent that sometimes set them apart.



      Nobody sounds 'right' to a Texan except another Texan???...and outside Texas they don't 'sound right' either?
      I used to have a very thick Boston accent. Pahk tha cah it has mostly gone away .

      And I pronounce most of my r's now . It will probably still be entertaining when I try to learn Spanish and have to lear to roll r's
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  • Late in here, but eithah version of your a-b-c could be misconstrued as the worst kinda filth -- if the context were to be positioned to make it so.

    If it helps, Do It In America unifies all freedoms, filth & virtue blended as one.

    To America demands it is Noo Year (prefrbly jus' this las' one).

    Hey, but what 'bout between America?

    Oceans of possibility there for any kinda work or do stuffs.

    Thing is tho, the nouns dictate the substance, the verbs describe the consequence.

    So I would wanna run this Big Six by again featurin' BANANA or CHEESE PREPARATION UTENSIL.

    This may make all the diffrence in figurin' WHAT behaves HOW.

    Aptness of purpose may be universal, but we sumtimes disagree on how this pans out.

    Plus also, "Work at it banana" demands a comma.

    Tellya, this is Hingerlish tootorin' sweet as it comes.
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  • I wonder how the final jingle goes... anyone?
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  • Profile picture of the author DWolfe
    Originally Posted by Charlyne Masongsong View Post

    I wonder how the final jingle goes... anyone?
    Originally Posted by superowid View Post


    By the way, the owner now is requesting to change it....

    Don't work it alone!
    Work it with blablabla.com
    Don't do it alone!
    Do it with blablabla.com

    So, whatever he said!
    Most likely what the original poster, posted above.
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  • Profile picture of the author Gaylenaramo
    Guess that the preposition "in" will be the best and correct option in both cases. Everything because preposition "in" points at your location or location of particular things. If we consider "at", then it often is used for point at the particular interval/time/time period, for example "I was there at 5 p.m". As for the last option, which is presented by the preposition "on", then native speakers use it when they need to describe some things which happen during a certain day, for example, "I will do it on Monday".
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