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Quaerereverum Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

A huge difference

Hello,

Can I say,'' It is a huge difference when you you cook for your friends and when have to cook for lots of people.''
Or should I say it is a huge difference between when

Thank you in advance.
  

Top answer

quaereeverum '' It is a huge difference when you you cook for your friends and when have to cook for your friends This is what you want to say, isn't it? There is a huge difference between wanting to cook for your friends and having to cook for them.

  • quaereeverum '' It is a huge difference when you you cook for your friends and when have to cook for your friends This is what you want to say, isn't it?
  • There is a huge difference between wanting to cook for your friends and having to cook for them.
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3 Answers
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quaereeverum'' It is a huge difference when you you cook for your friends and when have to cook for your friends
This is what you want to say, isn't it?
There is a huge difference between wanting to cook for your friends and having to cook for them.
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You are drawing a faulty contrast between friends and a large number of people. What if you have a large number of friends?

I recommend a contrast between a few people and a lot of people.

You're on the right track with "between":

There is a huge difference between cooking for just a few and cooking for a large group.

CJ
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