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meaning - If vs Only if vs If and only if - English Language . . . Yes, the person would yell once you fell, but only if you fell "If" and "Only if" used in the same way means the same thing, except that "only if" is more forceful, more compelling "If and only if" is the most obligatory of the three, in which the action has been distinguished and emphasised, "If, and only if " It's the most forceful of the three
If only I or If I only - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Possible Duplicate: Correct position of ldquo;only rdquo; Should I use only before or after the pronoun? If only I had a chance If I only had a chance Both sentences bring a lot of resu
Only to vs Just to - English Language Usage Stack Exchange In the following sentence I have to write one word: One annoying example of this is when you walk into a room, _____ to realise you have forgotten what your reason for going there was Accordin
As a (n) noun vs as only - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I wonder about the use of as a and as (only) in writing Can you explain when it is correct to quantify the noun when presenting oneself? I will paste some examples for clarity Are there any rule
word choice - Difference between just and only - English Language . . . 1 There is no difference between "just" and "only" in the context of this sentence The problem with this sentence is that neither of the constructions "not just airports" or "not only airports" cannot be used as the subject of a sentence *Not just airports are part of the target customer group
meaning - different usage of the word only - English Language Usage . . . To the point, your sentences 2 and 3 actually have exactly the same meaning Although the scope of the quantifier "only" usually changes based on what follows it in the sentence, in the exceptional usage of sentence 3 it is modifying only the preceding word, "English" He speaks only English == He speaks English only
When should only come before a verb phrase? [duplicate] You should put only before a verb phrase when either (a) the verb phrase is the focussed constituent of only, or (b) when the verb phrase contains another constituent that is the focus of only Words with a focus (e g, only, even, too, also) can go either immediately before their focussed constituent, or before any constituent that contains it