It is a way to buy the things you need.
delightful
Well, actually, if you are asking me personally if I would like to go shopping, I would ask, shopping for what?? I do not like to shop just for the sake of shopping, but I do enjoy looking for items and the pleasure I feel when the shopping trip has been a success.
If your going shopping, it means you plan to do some or are on the way to the shops. If your doing the shopping, it means you are actually shopping.
Correct grammar would be (present tense) "are you doing your shopping", or (past tense) "have you done your shopping".
The origin is that the word messages describes the actual shopping list that one would create whilst thinking of what to purchase. So the list is like a message, hence the various items make up the messages! Yours sincerely Tamish McTamish Clarke
It depends weather it is clothes shopping or food shopping but if it was food shopping i would say ice skating but the skates always hurt my feet. lol
Well if you think about it no rules means you can steal stuff. So if there were no rules in a shopping mall, there would be no shopping mall. This is because all the stores have nothing left.
I would say; She's going shopping. Or She's going grocery shopping. We don't want to be too wordy.
I would imagine that shopping on your cell phone would be equally safe to shop on as a PC. I would make certain to use a secure site to pay such as Paypal but otherwise I do not see any heightened risk.
Yes, the word 'shopping' is a noun called a gerund, the present participle of the verb 'to shop' that functions as a noun in a sentence.The present participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.Examples:Shopping is my sister's favorite sport. (noun, subject of the sentence)She always has shopping on her mind. (noun, direct object of the verb 'has')I need to borrow your car for shopping. (noun, object of the preposition 'for')I was shopping for a new coat. (verb)We took a shopping trip to the city. (adjective, describes the noun 'trip')
I would take 50-100 if you are REALLY shopping. otherwise just 50
I think I would write: "We went shopping after lunch." Or, to be even more correct: "We went shopping after we ate lunch."