Выбрать из множества учителей по предмету английский...
Jayden Cool
question
The words "absotively … posilutely" are not correct English either.
Q 1: what's the meaning of "either" in this case?
Q 2: I mean "The words "absotively … posilutely" are not correct English either." is a wrong sentence. Using “either” is not correct here because "The words "absotively … posilutely" are not correct English either." doesn’t follow any other sentence about errors. And "Neither are the words correct English" is a more correct phrasing, right?
24 янв. 2016 г., 4:08
Ответы · 2
It's a little hard to know without context. Where did you find this sentence? And what does the ellipsis represent?
You are correct in your implication that the 'either' would refer to a previous suggestion of incorrect words.
You are correct that that phrase would normally follow another sentence or phrase about errors, and without seeing the context, I can't tell why the author wrote it like that. It is even possible that it was written incorrectly deliberately and ironically.
If it was an unconnected sentence, then it would be correct to write 'Neither of the words "absotively … posilutely" are correct English.'
24 января 2016 г.
Все еще не нашли ответы?
Напишите свои вопросы, и пусть вам помогут носители языка!
Jayden Cool
Языковые навыки
китайский (путунхуа), английский
Изучаемый язык
английский
Статьи, которые тебе могут быть интересны

How to Ask for a Raise or Promotion in English
9 нравится · 8 Комментариев

The Key to Learning a Language Faster
30 нравится · 8 Комментариев

Why "General English" is Failing Your Career (An Engineer’s Perspective)
30 нравится · 12 Комментариев
Еще статьи
