Tram Nguyen
Which is correct? A or The? I encountered this sentence in my textbook. Question: Which is correct? (Choose one from each group) A. There are 1.23 dollars to a euro B. There are 1.23 dollars for a euro. C. There are 1.23 dollars to the euro. I chose A. But the correct answer is C. Could you clarify why "the euro" is correct? I think that "a", which is an indefinite article, is used to describe something not specific. In this sentence, "euro" is considered as "general" currency. I'm not sure why I should use "the" instead of "a". Thank you in advance for your kind help.
22 Mar 2019 06:02
Yanıtlar · 12
3
I would say both A and C sound very natural
22 Mart 2019
2
I would say both A and C are correct, depending on the context, and my answer would have been A (if we were talking about currencies in general). So, really, this is just a bad question - nothing more than that! :)
22 Mart 2019
2
'The' becAuse you are talking about 'the euro', not any old euro in general, but a specific currency with specific attributes. The Cdn dollar, the US dollar, the british pound - all refer to a currency, not a piece of currency in your pocket. You can often replace 'one' with 'a' or 'an' to get a better idea of which article makes more sense in a given context . Just to confuse things however, Colloquially, the two (a or the) in this case would likely be interchangeable in spoken language.
22 Mart 2019
2
B is definitely wrong, as you correctly deduced. Both A and C are good acceptable English. Just highlights the problem of multiple choice questions
22 Mart 2019
1
There are 1.23 dollars to a euro Because there's no "the" before "dollars" so there's also no "the" before "euros", just an "a".
22 Mart 2019
Hâlâ cevap bulamadın mı?
Sorularını yaz ve ana dil konuşanlar sana yardım etsin!