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Anonymous Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Climb Vs Reach In Three Hours.

They climbed the mountain in three hours.


She reached the summit in three hours.

My book says the former means it took three hours and the latter she reached after three hours. Why is there meaning difference between them dominated by the same prepositional phrase "In three hours"? To me, the latter also seems to mean Her reaching the summit took three hours.

Plus, in this case, I'm not sure whether Why is there meaning difference is right or Why are there meaning differences is right.

  

Top answer

1 There isnt' much difference, I don't think. However, if you read the definition from the Cambridge dictionary, you will see that unlike "climb," the word "reach" implies accomplishing something AFTER doing something. org/dictionary/english/reach 2.

  • 1 There isnt' much difference, I don't think.
  • However, if you read the definition from the Cambridge dictionary, you will see that unlike "climb," the word "reach" implies accomplishing something AFTER doing something.
  • org/dictionary/english/reach 2.
  • Difference, differences -- either one is okay depending on the context, but the singular "difference" is most standard when you are comparing two things.
  • " is probably the most common usage.
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1 Answers
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1 There isnt' much difference, I don't think. However, if you read the definition from the Cambridge dictionary, you will see that unlike "climb," the word "reach" implies accomplishing something AFTER doing something.

https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/reach

2.

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