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04:00
@M.A.R. hi how r u doing?
@CowperKettle how translation work going on?
04:47
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] No whitespace in answer: "Much much more" in formal language by NigelThornberry on ell.SE
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] No whitespace in answer, blacklisted user: "Much much more" in formal language by NigelThornberry on ell.SE
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Offensive answer detected, blacklisted user: "Much much more" in formal language by NigelThornberry on ell.SE
05:42
hello!
 
4 hours later…
09:39
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Offensive body detected, offensive title detected: What is the meaning of whore at closing time? by user60793 on ell.SE
 
4 hours later…
13:36
0
Q: a confusion in a sentence between the superlative and comparative form

miss mimiI have a confusion; Do we say "one of the largest players" or "one of the larger players"?

Is the mandatory in that phrase?
(Or any other determiner.) Because some results in COCA suggest that that might not be the case.
14:14
@userr2684291 yes. We use "the" with superlatives.
14:45
@LeakyNun I meant with comparatives.
@userr2684291 We also use "the" because in that case it is a specified group
just like we would say "the red hat"
@LeakyNun "When the procession had passed, wending its way toward one of larger temples, Hael went to the stall of a perfume merchant" – from COCA. Although it is one of the few examples I could find.
@userr2684291 that sounds unnatural to me
@LeakyNun Okay, thank you.
@LeakyNun There's also this: "'Someone needs to go up the trail and climb out across to them,' said one of older males, a big troll named Stump."
"He tops out on one of lower ridges."
But such usages are few and far between anyway.
15:04
@userr2684291 no idea
 
2 hours later…
17:03
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Few unique characters in answer: "Furthermore" versus "moreover" by user60885 on ell.SE
18:01
The teacher said to the student ," Recite the poem loudly."
A. The teacher told the students that the poem many be recited loudly B. The teacher asked the student to recite the poem loudly.
C. The teacher commanded the student that he should recite the poem loudly. D. The teacher expected that the student will recite the poem loudly.
Can anyone tell me what is the answer?
 
2 hours later…
20:10
@user62015 What do you think is the answer?
 
2 hours later…
21:51
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Link at end of answer, non-Latin link in answer, pattern-matching website in answer: difference between education & tuition by azad007 on ell.SE
22:06
Hi
22:51
@user62015 Hello.
Hi
The teacher said to the student, "Recite the poem loudly."
A. The teacher told the students that the poem may be recited loudly. B. The teacher asked the student to recite the poem loudly.
C. The teacher commanded the student that he should recite the poem loudly. D. The teacher expected that the student will recite the poem loudly.
Answer: Option B
Could you please help me?
Do you think this answer is correct?
@user62015 What do you think?
I think it is perfect but my friend told me C
@user62015 Is there something else, except for the imperative mood that intimates an authoritarian tone?
23:03
@user62015 Yeah, ask is the safest option.
Thanks.
@user62015 I think commanded the student that he should sounds archaic.
Or British, they use the should verb instead of the subjunctive, I think.
I agree.
There?
I have one more question?
23:12
@user62015 You do?
We wanted to purchase (a)/ something but all the three stores in that area (b)/ were closed on that day. (c)/ No error (d)
I think we write "were close" instead of "were closed"
What do you say?
@user62015 Where did you hear that? A store is said to be open or closed.
it was a question
In a competition exam
Okay.
@user62015 The sentence looks grammatical.
ok
Good Night. See you later.
23:23
Goodnight.

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