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kadisam
what' the difference between .5 year old, and 5 years old
1 jun. 2012 11:25
Antwoorden · 6
5
Depending on how we structure the sentence we can say
He is a five year old boy
or
He is five years old
We don't say he is a five years old boy or he is five year old boy
1 juni 2012
1
In the expression "5 year old," the word ''year" functions as an adjective and we do not use the plural form of the word. ( He is a five year old boy.) In the other expression, "5 years old," the word "year" is a noun and we thus use the plural form. (He is five years old.)
1 juni 2012
I'm unsure if '.5 years old' was intentional or not.
If that is what you are asking, then .5 would be a simpler way of saying 'point five', which is again a simplification of saying 'zero point five'. That means that someone who is .5 years old is actually 0.5 (half a year) old.
If the question was about the use of 'year' vs. 'years', then the above comments are correct.
1 juni 2012
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kadisam
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