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Pb03 Posted 16 years ago
Vocabulary

"all the prize" or "all for himself" ?

Hi guys,

In the following sentences, which interpretation would be more natural or better?

Would you check the words in red and comment some here for me?

Thank you~!

pb

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As he left, the fox stated that the lion wished to share the workload with others, but only wanted to keep the prize all for himself.

(In the phrase in red, how should I understand the word "all"? "Keep all the prize for himself" OR "keep the prize and "all for himeslf"?)
  

Top answer

'All' is an intensifier meaning 'entirely, completely'.

  • 'All' is an intensifier meaning 'entirely, completely'.
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1 Answers
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'All' is an intensifier meaning 'entirely, completely'.

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