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hela
Joined: 02 May 2004 Posts: 420 Location: Tunisia
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Posted: Sun Jan 05, 2014 9:17 pm Post subject: a bone of the dog / the dog's bone [possessive forms] |
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Hello everyone,
Would you please tell me if my understanding of these constructions is correct?
a) He found a bone of the dog. (= part of the dog’s skeleton?)
b) He found the bone of the dog. (= the bone belonging to the dog, the one it chews?)
c) He found the dog’s bone. (same as (b) = the one it chews ?)
d) He found a bone of the dog’s. (= one of the bones belonging to the dog)
(d) could refer either to a part of its skeleton or one of the bones it chews?)
Thank you for your help and I wish you all a very happy new year.
Hela |
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IanT
Joined: 13 Sep 2012 Posts: 340 Location: Spain
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Posted: Mon Jan 06, 2014 12:04 pm Post subject: |
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All correct, except (d) can only refer to the possession, not the skeleton.
Well done!
Best wishes,
Ian _________________ All my answers refer to British English.
www.EnglishSwearing.com - How to use all the bad words! ... and ... www.throdworld.com - Silly verses to make you happy.
You decide the price for both! |
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