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- another、other、the other 、others、the others,区别在哪里?
而“The other child is my brother ”中使用了other来呼应前一句话,表示我这句话所谈的另外一个 小孩 我们再仔细观察other、others和another这三个词,不难发现它们实际上都与other这个词有关。
- 英语中,another、other、one another、the other 应该怎么区别? - 知乎
The other team won (There were only 2 teams that could have won and the other team did ) The other three schools rejected me (We know 3 schools rejected the person ) Another is "an" and "other" put together It is "other" with an indefinite article (an) before it This indicates the number of other things is unknown or unspecified My team
- I and others or others and I? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
In British English, I would say me and a couple of others, since others is plural and implies a longer list I was taught that rule only applies when talking about two individuals So, rigourously, it would be Bob and I, but that me, John and Peter is a valid as John, Peter and I However, like the split infinitive, I think this is one of those non-rules of grammar Almost everyone, in the
- An other vs another - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The string an other is vanishingly rare in English In contrast another is positively pervasive I think it would be fair to say that the second has eclipsed the first to the point of making the first unacceptable, even though it is a grammatical string Both an and another are members of the category of determiners, while other, on the other hand, is an adjective There's no grammatical
- grammar - Something or other vs something or another? - English . . .
0 Both are grammatically correct You can use Something or other which is a usual way of representing Another method is One thing or another
- I would like to write how it works in other way
Could you tell me the other way to say "how it works" ? I am now making a presentation material and trying to explain how the new system works I would like to describe it in other words because I
- except for vs other than - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Perhaps, though, other equivalent phrases can highlight the difference in usage if you replace "except for" with "with the exception of" and "other than" with "apart from" Then we have "Are there any vegetables with the exception of asparagus?" which is clearly wrong So the two phrases have overlapping uses, but are not equivalent
- grammaticality - Is a whole nother grammatical? - English Language . . .
Often one will hear the phrase that's a whole nother kettle of fish, but is "nother" actually grammatical? If not, what would the correct way of saying it be?
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