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Which way: One and one ARE two? One and one IS two? "One and one is two" is grammatically correct if you are using "and" to mean "plus" (addition) Adding the number one with the number one produces the number two, which is a singular thing, therefore "one and one" (one plus one) is singular A clearer (and thus arguably better) way to say this, however, would be "one plus one equals two"
Which is correct vs which one is correct? [duplicate] answered Aug 25, 2020 at 21:53 SAJEETH AHAMED 11 1 Nice answer But consider this: the is in X is is only correct if X is singular So the one can be omitted - but you can always say which one to emphasize if the listener reader might not be paying attention or you otherwise want to be really clear – LawrenceC
Use of “for one” - English Language Learners Stack Exchange 1 "For one" is used in two ways Here are some examples Indicates that only one person feels a certain way: "I, for one, think that this is a bad idea " In the case above, you should use commas surrounding "for one" because it is an introductory clause; it introduces and clarifies the rest of the sentence
Which vs Which one - English Language Learners Stack Exchange The "one" could imply that of the alternates only ONE choice is possible, or permitted "Which" alone could indicate several choices from the set of alterates could be selected in various combinations Of course, speakers are often very imprecise about their meanings intentions when saying "which" or "which one"
articles - Difference between one and the one - English Language . . . 1 "One" can act as an indefinite article, like "a" For example, "an apple" or "a banana" is the same as saying " one apple" or " one banana" As a pronoun, it can refer to a non-specific individual, such as the average person Without the definite article "the", "one" doesn't make a person or a thing unique
idioms - On one hand vs on the one hand. - English Language . . . In most contexts, when contrasting "one" with "the other", the article is not used before "one" I would class On the one hand and on the one side as idioms In the NoW Corpus "On the one hand" has 28822 hits, and "On the one side" 1657, against 2504 examples of "On the one [any other noun]" - (349 of these are "on the one show", and nearly all
word usage - One hundred and fifty-one or one hundred fifty-one . . . For example, 1 1 2 is spoken “one and one-half”, and 1 5 is spoken “one and five tenths” 125 is correctly spoken “one hundred twenty-five” If you choose to speak “one hundred and twenty-five” which is what 90%+ of Americans say, not a big deal unless you take pride in speaking correctly
One of them vs. One of which - English Language Learners Stack Exchange So the problem with the first sentence is that "them" is not a relative pronoun and the clause is an independent clause You need a conjunction to connect the two clauses if you want them both in one sentence I have two assignments, and one of them is done Or alternatively you need to make them two separate sentences, which means you need to
Which one or Which ones - English Language Learners Stack Exchange 0 'Which ones do you like?' is a general question - we can easily like two or all three of those choices, so inviting 'multiple answers' is not a bad thing But if I'm offering you one of these things as a snack now, I might ask 'Which one do you like?', but would probably ask 'Which one would you like?' Share Improve this answer
articles - What is the difference between one and a? - English . . . 4 Both a an and one mean one The difference is that "one" puts more emphasis on the number such as I have 4 computers and a printer I have 4 computers and only one printer So when you say a feature of my work or one feature of my work, it means the same, with the only difference that "one" is emphatic compared to "a"