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victoria
Could you tell me the difference between "a dozen" and "a dozen of"?
For example, it should be ----a dozen or a dozen of eggs? If both right, what is the difference?
2015年3月6日 05:44
回答 · 4
2
'Of' makes it refer to a group that you specify. Suppose there's a bunch of eggs in front of you.
If you say 'I used a dozen eggs', you could be talking about any twelve eggs.
If you say 'I used a dozen of these eggs', then you're saying that you used twelve of the eggs that are in front of you.
'A dozen of eggs' is not correct, because you need to indicate what group the eggs are part of. 'Twelve of the eggs', 'a dozen of Fred's eggs'.
2015年3月6日
2
You only say "of" if it is followed by a pronoun or an article. In this case, the dozen is always part of a bigger number.
Ex.
A dozen eggs
A dozen of the eggs we bought (we bought more than twelve eggs, but this only refers to a dozen of them)
A dozen of his eggs
A dozen people
A dozen of us
2015年3月6日
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victoria
語学スキル
中国語 (普通話), 英語, 日本語
言語学習
英語, 日本語
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