|
- articles - another, an another or a another which one is . . .
Should I use "an" or "a" before the word "another"? If yes, when should use it Or I can just use "another" without any of those articles (a an)
- anothers vs another - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
If just a few hundred hours of play-based therapy can improve my life and save another’s, I am more than happy to help Should I replace "another’s" with "another"?
- Is there any difference between another two and two other?
But regardless of the context and how the second sentence is interpreted, another and other mean something different: another two: two more two additional two other: two different as replacements two different in addition
- My other or My another - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
In the noun phrase another sister, the determiner slot is filled by another, a determinative This word was formed by compounding an + other I'm sure you already know you can't put my and an together, because that would be two determiners together For the same reason, you can't put my and another together * [My another sister] is taller than me
- grammar - Difference between the other and another - English . . .
7 No, it's not supposed to be "another" They actually left out the word 'one'--it's understood by native speakers See below I have just imparted to you two pieces of advice Whether you will eventually choose one over the other [one] is a matter of personal choice, so good luck "Another" is the contracted form of "an other"
- Anothers vs Others - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Another (an other) is singular so - call attention to another's mistakes indirectly Summary: others' things for more than one, another's thing or things for one
- What’s the most idiomatic word for “a person from another country”?
1 *Foreigner is the right word:" emigrant meaning a person who leaves their own country in order to settle permanently in another "she was a Polish emigrant who came to Scotland during the Second World War" *** Foreigner meaning a person born in or coming from a country other than one's own "the bakery was popular with locals and
- phrase usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Another says "wanted to" is more polite: Both are correct, but we use wanted to show more politeness, especially if your addressee has a higher status than you or is a person that you respect (reference) And also this one about "I am was wondering": While technically the three phrases differ in tense, they all have the same meaning
|
|
|