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Amy
Does 'It is regrettable that~' mean 'I'm sorry that~'?
Does sentence 1 mean sentence 2?
1.It is regrettable that the police were not informed sooner.
2.I'm sorry that the police were not informed sooner.
Sep 7, 2012 3:21 PM
Answers · 3
1
"it is regrettable" refers to people in general. "It is regrettable (for us all) that..."
"I am sorry" = It is regrettable for me (but not necessarily anyone else, though that might be true.)
September 7, 2012
1
No it does not mean the same thing.
The first sentence is a general observation that expresses the situation as not good.
The second is a personal statement ( as opposed to a general one) that expresses personal regret.
John
September 7, 2012
They do not mean the same thing in conversation, but literally 'sorry' indicates regret, therefore they do literally mean the same thing, although 'it is regrettable that~' usually indicates that you regret somebody else's decision.
September 7, 2012
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Amy
Language Skills
English, Korean
Learning Language
English
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