Noha
Tom is tall, and "Henry's" too . is that correct? Hi all, Can we abbreviate "Henry is too " to "Henry's too" ? Could you explain? - Tom is tall, and Henry's too - Tom is tall, and Henry is, too Note : Please reply to this as an answer not as a comment
16 Thg 08 2020 09:44
Câu trả lời · 5
1
I don't know of any 'specific' gramatical reason why you can't abbreviate a word at the end of a sentence, but it's frowned upon. It reads awkwardly/unnaturally. If I had to guess it's because it reads more like something belonging to Henry. It is Henry's, for example. If you have this type of sentence you can either: - Use the non abbreviated version: Tom is tall and Henry is too. - Restructure your sentence a bit: Tom is tall and so is Henry. Or, Both Tom and Henry are tall.
16 tháng 8 năm 2020
The best answer is "Tom is tall, so is Henry"
17 tháng 8 năm 2020
You need to say 'Henry is' here. You could say 'and Henry's tall too', but not 'and Henry's too'. The contraction shouldn't come before a word like 'too'. I'm not sure how to explain it in more detail, but hopefully that's enough :)
16 tháng 8 năm 2020
No
16 tháng 8 năm 2020
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