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- , for one. or . For one, (an SAT question) - WordReference Forums
And "For one" in D is completely illogical as the second item mentioned Here is the sentence with B (making it actually two sentences, which is the problem): - During the decades-long movement to codify the rights of Latinos in the US, certain events were pivotal: the founding of labor rights group El Teatro Campesino in 1965, for one The
- Is the use of one of the correct in the following context?
I want to know what the constraints are on using the phrase one of the Is it used correctly in this example? He is one of the soldiers who fight for their country
- Writing someones height. [six foot one, 6 11 . . . . ]
The versions in blue are equal to 185 centimeters, and the versions in red are equal to 211 centimeters Please be careful about what you really mean [ QUOTE] I just realized and you're right! I meant six foot one and, therefore, 6'1", not 6'11" I just wanted to know if it was better to write 6'1" or six foot one in an essay
- anyone vs someone. Which one? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Has someone seen my bag? Has anyone seen my bag? Which one is grammatically correct and Why? Which one should I use at this place? Can you give some more examples?
- pronouns - Usage of one, ones, oneself, ones own - English Language . . .
He him himself could replace one one's oneself grammatically, but from a usage point of view you might have changed a gender neutral sentence into a sentence about a man
- ride to ones rescue - WordReference Forums
"ride to someone's rescue" is an idiom meaning "come to someone's rescue " Ride into their lives like a savior on a horse Remember to search: ride to the rescue
- Which one is correct—one of which or one of them?
The sentence "This made her think of her Grandpa and her Dad; one of them has passed on and the other is deployed " is unlikely to be correct since you're combining two complete sentences with a semicolon instead of a conjunction
- not one of them VS. no one of them. | WordReference Forums
You can say not one of them (meaning not even a single one of them), or none of them, or possibly neither of them (if only two people are involved) "No one of them" is not grammatical
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