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Anonymous Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Adverb or Adjective

'So both in summer and winter it is comfortably living in this amazing house'. Is this sentence correct? I feel like it should be 'comfortable', but I am not sure. Do any of you know?

  

Top answer

Assuming that "it" is a dummy "it", which is very likely what is intended, "comfortable" should be "comfortably", as you say. g. possibly an animal, that is living in the house.

  • Assuming that "it" is a dummy "it", which is very likely what is intended, "comfortable" should be "comfortably", as you say.
  • g.
  • possibly an animal, that is living in the house.
  • ) The "both" phrase is not quite correct.
  • It should be "both in summer and in winter" or "in both summer and winter".
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1 Answers
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Assuming that "it" is a dummy "it", which is very likely what is intended, "comfortable" should be "comfortably", as you say.

("comfortably" could be correct if "it" refers to a non-human entity, e.g. possibly an animal, that is living in the house. This seems unlikely to be the intention.)

The "both" phrase is not quite correct. It should be "both in summer and in winter" or "in b

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