Asked by rfvv
Posted by rfvv on Thursday, October 11, 2012 at 3:39am.
1. The grass grows thick in the garden.
2. The grass grows thickly in the garden.
3. The grass grows thin in the garden.
4. The grass grows thinly in the garden.
(Which expressions are correct and grammatical?)
•English - Writeacher, Thursday, October 11, 2012 at 6:57am
Since I could say, "The grass is thick [or thin] in the garden," and keep the same meaning, I would use sentences 1 and 3.
Scroll down a bit and read all about the "multiple personalities" verbs!!
====================================
Thank you for your help.
1. The grass grows thick in the garden.
2. The grass becomes thick in the
garden.
(Does #1 mean #2? or is 'thick' used as an adverb?)
1. The grass grows thick in the garden.
2. The grass grows thickly in the garden.
3. The grass grows thin in the garden.
4. The grass grows thinly in the garden.
(Which expressions are correct and grammatical?)
•English - Writeacher, Thursday, October 11, 2012 at 6:57am
Since I could say, "The grass is thick [or thin] in the garden," and keep the same meaning, I would use sentences 1 and 3.
Scroll down a bit and read all about the "multiple personalities" verbs!!
====================================
Thank you for your help.
1. The grass grows thick in the garden.
2. The grass becomes thick in the
garden.
(Does #1 mean #2? or is 'thick' used as an adverb?)
Answers
Answered by
Writeacher
In both sentences, "thick" is a predicate adjective describing "grass."
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