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Why is it three score years and ten almost half the time and not . . . 3 Why is it 'three score years and ten' almost half the time and not always 'three score and ten years'? Note: I edited the question body and title in light of comments and answers pointing me to a Google phrase frequency chart which indicates that the two versions are used about equally often right now
of the three vs of all three - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Both are correct You would usually use "A is the oldest of the three" if you were talking about three people from a larger group e g three girls who have two brothers, while you would use "A is the oldest of all three" if there were only three in the group e g three girls with no brothers
Three of which vs three of them? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange The correct sentence is: Four pits have been unearthed, three of which contained gold 'Of which' is correct because you need a possessive form to accurately describe the relationship between the three pits and the gold Three of the pits contain gold, i e , the gold is their 'possession' (in the grammatical sense)
Which is right — all the three or all three in a situation of . . . All three cars already implies that you are referring to specific cars; you don't need the article to clarify that these aren't just any cars I would say that your best options are all three cars, three of the cars, or each of [the] three cars, depending on the context
vocabulary - Hat-trick is for three, whats the word for four . . . Three-peat, unfortunately, is a term trademarked in the US by former Laker coach and current Heat GM Pat Riley, so while it's in generic use as a figure of speech, it has to be licensed if being used for merchandise Further, the -peat portion of those terms applies in speech to season-long championships, not tries or successes in a single contest