Arkadiusz
Hey, what's the difference between 'for the 4 straight days' and 'for the 4 days in a row'?
31 aug. 2021 10:52
Antwoorden · 3
2
"for four straight days" means something has been going on constantly for four days, for example a machine has been running for four straight days. "four days in a row" means that you have been doing something every day for four days, for example you had breakfast in the hotel four days in a row. It is grammatically correct to omit "for" and "the" in these sentence examples :)
31 augustus 2021
1
You can find the connection between the two similar ways to state time passing by understanding the word straight. Straight means something linear, a line, a row. So you can see the usage is slightly different but they both come from the same conceptual root, one from Latin's and one from Saxon's root.
31 augustus 2021
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
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