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What is the difference
three years old vs. three-year-old
Question: What is the difference between the following:
-The child is three years old
-The three-year-old child...
2011年8月8日 18:38
回答 · 4
1
Your two examples are correct. # years old comes after a verb. "I will become 20 years old."
#-year-old comes before a noun. I have a six-year-old son.
2011年8月8日
The child is three years old. = Complete sentence
The child = subject
is three years old = predicate
The three-year-old child....= part of a sentence that need completing
The = article
three-year-old = adjective
child = noun
Actually the difference is quite obvious.
2011年8月8日
There is no difference in meaning really... the difference is rather the placement of the adjective, which becomes compounded (or hyphenated) when it goes before the verb. This often happens in English when an adjective has more than one word, which is to say, when it is an "adjectival phrase."...
Examples:
"The dragon with five heads." = "The five-headed dragon..."
"The girl with short hair." = "The short-haired girl...."
This is done for clarity in sentences where the adjective is followed by another verb expressing more information or action.
2011年8月8日
The child is three years old.....................matter is about the age of a child.
The three year old child...........................matter is about a child which has three years.
2011年8月8日
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bobi
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阿拉伯语, 英语, 法语, 德语, 意大利语, 西班牙语
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