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Kooyeen Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

adjectives by themselves

Hi,
I noticed I have trouble with adjectives when used alone.
A black cat and a white cat.
A black cat and a white one.

Ok. Those are ok, but what should I do if I wanted to remove one noun or pronoun?
A black and a white cat.
A black and white cat. <--- No, this would refer to one cat that is black and white
A black and a white cats. <--- No


And what if use the determinative adjective? I want to say "the black cat and the white cat"...
The black and the white cat.
The black and the white cats.
The black and white cats.
The black and white cat.


Hmm, what do the native speakers say? Thanks.
  

Top answer

Hi I would say A black cat and a white cat ............. The black cat and the white cat (if there is only one of each) The black cats and the white cats (if there are more than one of each) One way round the problem would be to use Both, at the beginning of the sentence. Both the black and white cat like milk.

  • Hi I would say A black cat and a white cat .............
  • The black cat and the white cat (if there is only one of each) The black cats and the white cats (if there are more than one of each) One way round the problem would be to use Both, at the beginning of the sentence.
  • Both the black and white cat like milk.
  • Both the black and white cats are available for purchase.
  • Just my opinion!
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15 Answers
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Hi

I would say

A black cat and a white cat .............

The black cat and the white cat (if there is only one of each)

The black cats and the white cats (if there are more than one of each)

One way round the problem would be to use Both, at the beginning of the sentence.

Both the black and white cat like milk.

Both the black and whit
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I see thanks. So if you have a sentence like "The black cat and the white cat were playing", would you turn it into...
The black and the white cat were playing.
... using the singular "cat" and not "cats", right?
And if I left out the second article too...
The black and white cat were playing.
...it would sound bad, right?

Thanks again.
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Hi Kooyeen
KooyeenThe black and white cat were playing.
KooyeenThe black and the white cat were playing.
If you use 'cat', it means you are referring to one cat.
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Yoong LiatIf you use 'cat', it means you are referring to one cat.
Hi,
sorry, I don't understand. Did you mean...
1 - The black and white cat. <--- One cat, I agree.
2 - The black and the white cat. <--- There are two here


My problem involved that second sentence... Should it be "cat" or "cats"?
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Kooyeen2 - The black and the white cat. <--- There are two here

I would reword as: The black cat and the white one...

To me, The black and the white cat is not correct grammatically, if you want to refer to two cats.
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Kooyeen
Yoong LiatIf you use 'cat', it means you are referring to one cat.
Hi,
sorry, I don't understand. Did you mean...
1 - The black and white cat. <--- One cat, I agree.
2 - The black and the white cat. <--- There are two here


My problem involved that second sentence... Should it be "cat" or "cats"?
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Grammar GeekDefinitely two cats.
Hmm. Emotion: crying Barb, I am confused.

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I hadn't thought about ellipsis.

A black and a white cat - yes, that does make sense for two cats when you think about ellipsis.
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Ok, I see, thanks Emotion: smile
But do you think you would agree with this, if you used "the"?
KooyeenThe black an
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Truthfully, this seems a bit like an exercise made to demonstrate a point, and not something that we deal with very often in real life.

Context would tell you everything, and almost all of these types of discussions would be oral and in context, and not in writing.

If I really didn't already know that there was one cat that was white and one that was black, the person would prob

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