Asked by rfvv
1. He is the student of our school.
2. He is the only student of our school.
[Does #1 mean #2? Does #1 mean that there is only one student in our school?]
3. They are some students of our school.
4. They are students of our school.
[Does #3 mean #4? Are both used commonly?]
2. He is the only student of our school.
[Does #1 mean #2? Does #1 mean that there is only one student in our school?]
3. They are some students of our school.
4. They are students of our school.
[Does #3 mean #4? Are both used commonly?]
Answers
Answered by
Writeacher
<b>Not "of our school"</b> -- please use "at" or "in" our school.
1. He is the student at our school.
2. He is the only student at our school.
[Does #1 mean #2? Does #1 mean that there is only one student in our school?] <b>Yes</b>
3. They are some of the students at our school.
4. They are students at our school.
[Does #3 mean #4? Are both used commonly?] <b>I changed a bit of the phrasing so please read and reread them to be aware. 3 and 4 are very close to meaning the same thing.
</b>
1. He is the student at our school.
2. He is the only student at our school.
[Does #1 mean #2? Does #1 mean that there is only one student in our school?] <b>Yes</b>
3. They are some of the students at our school.
4. They are students at our school.
[Does #3 mean #4? Are both used commonly?] <b>I changed a bit of the phrasing so please read and reread them to be aware. 3 and 4 are very close to meaning the same thing.
</b>
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