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, for one. or . For one, (an SAT question) - WordReference Forums And "For one" in D is completely illogical as the second item mentioned Here is the sentence with B (making it actually two sentences, which is the problem): - During the decades-long movement to codify the rights of Latinos in the US, certain events were pivotal: the founding of labor rights group El Teatro Campesino in 1965, for one The
Writing someones height. [six foot one, 6 11 . . . . ] The versions in blue are equal to 185 centimeters, and the versions in red are equal to 211 centimeters Please be careful about what you really mean [ QUOTE] I just realized and you're right! I meant six foot one and, therefore, 6'1", not 6'11" I just wanted to know if it was better to write 6'1" or six foot one in an essay
ride to ones rescue - WordReference Forums "ride to someone's rescue" is an idiom meaning "come to someone's rescue " Ride into their lives like a savior on a horse Remember to search: ride to the rescue
Which one is correct—one of which or one of them? The sentence "This made her think of her Grandpa and her Dad; one of them has passed on and the other is deployed " is unlikely to be correct since you're combining two complete sentences with a semicolon instead of a conjunction
not one of them VS. no one of them. | WordReference Forums You can say not one of them (meaning not even a single one of them), or none of them, or possibly neither of them (if only two people are involved) "No one of them" is not grammatical
Relative clause - . . . one of those people who make” or “makes? As for what follows one of those being a plural, what you are doing is saying that X is a single selection from a group of two or more things It's roughly the equivalent of the phrase one of many Some examples show the syntactical problem with using the singular: I'm eating one of those red jellybean I'm eating one of many red jellybean
one or more people - WordReference Forums When usage and logic clash (along the lines of "more than one person has said"): We often hear this phrase, but how can "people" (meaning 'the plural of "person"') take a singular verb? Would you prefer an alternate way of saying this, such as "one person or more"? [This sounds quite awkward to