Pesquise entre vários professores de Inglês...
Gabriel
longest/the longest
Hello, everyone
I am confused about the use of "longest". Should I use it at the beginning or end of a sentence?
Like:
"Who is the person who remained LONGEST underwater?"
or
"Who is the person who remained THE LONGEST underwater?"
or
"Who is the person who remained underwater THE LONGEST?"
and
"He is the person who survived LONGEST being adrift at sea?"
or
"He is the person who survived THE LONGEST being adrift at sea?"
or
"He is the person that survived being adrift at sea THE LONGEST?"
Thank you so much!
22 de mai de 2016 11:19
Respostas · 2
It can be used both places because "the longest" is an adverbial phrase (Longest: adverb). Adverbs/adverbial phrases are quite flexible (some are limited) where you can place them. The one at the end gives "the longest" more emphasis or sounding uncertain. Specially if you extend the length of the word "longest" in an echo question.
Ex:
Asker -"Who is the person who remained THE LONGEST underwater?"
Replier (echo question) -"Who is the person who remained underwater THE LONGEST?" ummm this one person etc...
Also "the longest" in these cases, since you are using the word "the" which is a one time/person or the only instance. "The" will work with other adverbs that are similar. Who spend THE MOST time in the water? Who is THE slowest swimmer, Who is THE fastest swimmer? etc...
hope that helps.
22 de maio de 2016
As long as you use "the", you can use "the longest" both in the middle and in the end of the sentence.
Where you put it depends on what sounds better for the sentence.
22 de maio de 2016
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Gabriel
Habilidades linguísticas
Inglês, Francês, Português, Espanhol
Idioma de aprendizado
Inglês, Francês, Espanhol
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