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Arisha Kotouchova
It is worth nothing that an event blandly _____ "My city" or "People I know" will not draw the crowds. Why is the word entitled and not titled needed in this sentence?
20 de mar. de 2025 12:38
Respuestas · 4
1
If the event was given the name "My City" or "People I know". Then you can use "Entitled". This is very formal.
If the Event had no official title or name, which is probably unlikely. You can use "Title".. This is informal.. And used more in Daily speaking... So it depends on what message you are trying to get across.
20 de marzo de 2025
1
Titled = having been given a title. Applies to everything people, books, pictures, artworks, buildings, play, films, drams, poetry and a persons name and your name my name,. Everything you can think off.
Titled also ="being given a Title" such as a Knighthood or an honorific of any kind.
Entitled = having the right to claim or hold something. A knight with the honour or honorific of being called a knight is both a tiled person and entitled to be called a Knight.
I would say titled is better for your sentence. We are only taking about an event. An event normally does not hold any entitlement, Other than being held at the place where it is presumably legally allowed to be held.
20 de marzo de 2025
1
Hi Arisha. Speaking to you from England, here both words are acceptable. It’s fine to say titled in this sentence.
20 de marzo de 2025
It is worth noting (not nothing).
20 de marzo de 2025
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Arisha Kotouchova
Competencias lingüísticas
Árabe (egipcio), Checo, Inglés, Francés, Alemán, Italiano, Nepalí, Ruso, Español
Idioma de aprendizaje
Árabe (egipcio), Checo, Inglés, Francés, Alemán, Italiano, Nepalí, Español
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