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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

all or any

> Generally low formaldehyde emission levels (4 stars) are not a requirement for all of the cur-rent markets that [company name] operates in.

Does this mean that the low emission levels are not required in any of the market, or in some of the market?
  

Top answer

It's ambiguous; it could mean either.

  • It's ambiguous; it could mean either.
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3 Answers
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It's ambiguous; it could mean either.
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Thank you very much for your help!
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You're welcome, and you're right that "any" or "some" would clarify that sentence.

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