绑德sings
But "how" can not help to elicit such a response as "the third" for "Jefferson was the third president", where English has no really satisfactory way of phrasing the question. (original) Is this sentence grammatically correct? I guess: If we question about " the third" for " Jefferson was the third president" , there is no way to use the word "how" to form the interrogative sentence to question about "the third" here, or rather, "how" can not help to elicit such a response as "the third" for "Jefferson was the 3rd president". Is that right?
4 de feb. de 2025 5:38
Respuestas · 4
1
"The word 'how' cannot be used to form a question that elicits the answer 'the third' in the sentence 'Jefferson was the third president' because English lacks a natural way to phrase such a question." Your Sentence (Corrected & More Natural): "If we want to ask about 'the third' in 'Jefferson was the third president,' we cannot use 'how' to form the question. In other words, 'how' does not naturally lead to the answer 'the third' in this context." Tip: When explaining grammar concepts, aim for clarity and conciseness. Avoid repetition and overcomplicating the sentence structure. Instead of saying "question about 'the third,'" use "ask about 'the third.'"
4 de feb. de 2025 10:54
Invitado
1
In this case, the pronoun determiner which would be needed instead of how if you're simply asking which number president he was: "Which number president was Jefferson?" which being used to select from a number of concrete options. This would elicit the response, "the third". How would be used in more open-ended questions such as "how did Jefferson become president?"
4 de feb. de 2025 7:54
Invitado
1
Which sentence exactly?
4 de feb. de 2025 6:06
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