Vind Engels Leerkrachten
š·āš¼šš°
"There are more positive opinions than negative opinions."
According to Oxford dictionary, the pronoun one that is used to avoid repeating a noun is seldom used for uncountable nouns or abstract countable nouns.
e.g. 'The Scottish legal system is not the same as the English system' is better than '... as the English one'.
I'm trying to avoid repeating "opinions" and not to use 'ones'.
1. There are more positive opinions than negatives.
2. There are more positive opinions than the negatives.
3. There are positive opinions more than negatives
4. There are positive opinions more than the negatives.
Which one sounds better or is grammatically correct?
Any other way to avoid the repetition while not changing the structure?
9 okt. 2021 22:49
Antwoorden Ā· 6
1
The four options youāve listed are all wrong. If you want, you can simply leave out the noun the second time ā this strikes me as a formal style. It works in your sample sentence, although Iām not sure exactly what the rule is. Note that adjectives do not inflect, so there is no -s suffix. āThere are more positive opinions than negative.ā
9 oktober 2021
1
None are grammatically correct. You can say
There are more positive than negative opinions.
9 oktober 2021
Hi. Iam sourav from india. I can speak English fluently could you help me learning korean language. I can speak you in english and i can teach you hindi for free of cost. Thanks
17 oktober 2021
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
š·āš¼šš°
Taalvaardigheden
Chinees (Mandarijn), Engels, Frans, Japans, Koreaans, Spaans
Taal die wordt geleerd
Chinees (Mandarijn), Engels, Frans, Japans, Koreaans, Spaans
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