Welcometo meaning in English
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Definition
Welcome to (the jungle, Paris, my home)!: I am happy that you have arrived in (the jungle, Paris, my home)!
Examples
- "Magda: Hello and welcome to the Hotel Blunderbuss automated help system."
Exercise 1
Jean uses some great expressions to welcome Brian and Icarus!
Complete the sentences below with terms used in the dialogue.
To invite someone to enter a room we say: "Step right !"
Next, we might say: "Welcome my home!"
Complete the sentences below with terms used in the dialogue.
To invite someone to enter a room we say: "Step right !"
Next, we might say: "Welcome my home!"
Jean uses some great expressions to welcome Brian and Icarus!
Complete the sentences below with terms used in the dialogue.
To invite someone to enter a room we say: "Step right in 1!"
Next, we might say: "Welcome to 2 my home!"
Complete the sentences below with terms used in the dialogue.
To invite someone to enter a room we say: "Step right in 1!"
Next, we might say: "Welcome to 2 my home!"
1 in: "In" is the best choice here. If we tell someone to "step right in", we are inviting them to enter a room. This is a warm and polite way of welcoming someone. Example: "Step right in, Mr Morrissey, and we'll begin your examination".
1 out: This is not the right answer. To "step out (of a room)" is to leave it. We need the opposite meaning here.
1 down: This is not the right answer. To "step down" is to "resign" or decide to leave a job or other position. This is unrelated to entering a room.
1 aside: This is not the right answer. To "step aside" is to move out of someone's way, either literally or figuratively. This is unrelated to entering a room.
2 to: "To" is the term needed here. We always welcome somebody to a place. Some more examples: "Welcome to the jungle", "Welcome to Africa", "Welcome to London".
2 in: It is grammatically incorrect to say "welcome in my home".
2 at: It is grammatically incorrect to say "welcome at my home".
2 within: It is highly unnatural to say "welcome within my home": this sounds very awkward.
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