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Anonymous Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

A pair of

Dear Teachers,

Can we say 'a pair of' when referring to bulbs or lights? Such as: They were studying under a pair of lamps.

Thank you very much for the help.

  

Top answer

It's possible, though we typically restrict "pair" to cases where the items are closely related in some way. For example, a "pair of lamps" might be two identical matching lamps sold together. Thus, in your sentence, the use of "pair" can make us think that there is something more to it than just that there are two lamps.

  • It's possible, though we typically restrict "pair" to cases where the items are closely related in some way.
  • For example, a "pair of lamps" might be two identical matching lamps sold together.
  • Thus, in your sentence, the use of "pair" can make us think that there is something more to it than just that there are two lamps.
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1 Answers
0

It's possible, though we typically restrict "pair" to cases where the items are closely related in some way. For example, a "pair of lamps" might be two identical matching lamps sold together. Thus, in your sentence, the use of "pair" can make us think that there is something more to it than just that there are two lamps.

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