Arkadiusz
Hey, what's the difference between 'for the 4 straight days' and 'for the 4 days in a row'?
Aug 31, 2021 10:52 AM
Answers · 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 :)
August 31, 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.
August 31, 2021
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