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Coif200287 Posted 12 years ago
Vocabulary

Difference between "earliest" and "early"?

Hi everyone. Could you help me. I have 2 follow sentences in the same paragraph:
1. Scientists work to save earliest photos from being lost forever
2. We tell about the efforts of scientist to help save early photos from being lost forever.
So, my questions are:
1. What kind of "earliest" in this case and what does it mean in english? If it is an adj in superlative, so why don't we use "the" before it?
2. They uses these sentences in the same topic. So, What is the difference between "earliest" and "early"
Thanks a lot Emotion: smile
  

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7 Answers
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coif200287Nobody helps me
Self-pity is not an admirable emotion, coif. We are all volunteers here, who come, contribute for free, and go as we please.
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I am very sorry for my self-pity. And could you tell me what do you mean when you say "go as we please"? Thanks.
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coif200287 what do you mean when you say "go as we please"?
It means that we are not employed here or required to be present or contribute. So please be patient.

As for your sentences, I suggest:

1. What kind of "earliest" in this case and what does it mean in english? If it is an adj in superlative, so why don't we use "the" before it?--
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Thank you for your suggestion. So you mean the way to write in sort in headlines is totally acceptable in writting?
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coif200287So you mean the way to write in sort in headlines is totally acceptable in writting?
If you are writing headlines, yes; otherwise, no.

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