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Sophia
What a relief or what relief.
I saw ‘what relief ‘in a book,and ‘what a relief ‘ on internet. Could anyone tell me what’s the difference between them?Thank you!
Jun 2, 2021 3:26 PM
Answers · 13
Invitee
the difference is that 'what relief' is referring to relief in general whereas 'what a relief' is referring to the relief felt about something specific. when you say 'what a relief' it is a short exclamation of the statement 'what a relief THIS IS'.
June 2, 2021
They are used differently:
What a relief! (used as an exclamation)
She was surprised at what relief she felt from taking off her shoes. ( explaining, used with "from")
June 2, 2021
As the others have said, "What a relief!" is a standalone phrase meaning something like "Thank God!" I have never heard "What relief!"used as a standalone phrase although it could exist as part of a larger sentence (as the others have mentioned). If you saw it in a book it was either a typo, or it was not a complete sentence by itself.
June 2, 2021
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Sophia
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English
Learning Language
English
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