- pronouns - One of them vs. One of which - English Language Learners . . .
Which one is grammatically correct or better? I have two assignments, One of them is done I have two assignments, One of which is done I watched a video tutorial that the teacher said the
- Which one is the best vs. which one the best is
"Which one is the best" is obviously a question format, so it makes sense that " which one the best is " should be the correct form This is very good instinct, and you could even argue that the grammar is good, but at best it's unnatural
- One-to-one vs. one-on-one - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
One-to-one is used when you talk about transfer or communications You may use one-to-one when you can identify a source and a destination For eg , a one-to-one email is one sent from a single person to another, i e , no ccs or bccs In maths, a one-to-one mapping maps one element of a set to a unique element in a target set One-on-one is the correct adjective in your example See Free
- Which came first when saying numbers: one hundred AND one or one . . .
101: One hundred and one 234,500: Two hundred and thirty four thousand five hundred Based on my experience, Britons, Australians and New Zealanders say the "and", and North Americans do not (ie "one hundred one", etc) I believe most other English speaking countries say the "and" Which version was used first?
- The difference between only one and one and only one
However, "one and only one" adds emphasis to the fact that there is only one, and draws attention to it For example, the student who is the only one who failed, might feel more ashamed if the teacher uses "one and only one", as the teacher might be perceived as purposely drawing attention to that fact, for whatever reason
- Difference between One to One and One on One
You typically wouldn't use either phrase for meetings 'One-to-one' is rare and often technical in any case, you might say, 'On most websites there is a one-to-one relationship between a username and an account,' meaning that there is only one username per account, and only one account per username As @FumbleFingers said, 'one-on-one' tends to suggest physical activity, or at least
- one of . . . singular or plural? [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
1 One of the former students "One of" refers to a group The group that follows is plural "Students" is plural of "student " Consider the statement, "one of the team " A team is a group It can be referred to as singular or plural, depending on the context In this case, the sentence refers to a larger entity which "one" is part of
- Whats the difference between ones, the ones, those, one, the . . .
Some people say a dog=one, dogs=ones, the dog=the one=that, and the dogs=the ones=those It's a rule of thumb, but what I found was that this is not always correct
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