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Jackson6612 Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

difference between ''round'' and ''around''

*71*0 01p

00I'm copying the following text from some other source:02p

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01span00Round can work as a noun, an adjective, a verb, an adverb and a preposition. Around can work as an adverb or a preposition.02span02p

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01span00Examples given for each word, when they act as prepositions, are:02span02p

01pre
01span00around the corner. / 02span01span00round the corner.02span02pre
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01span01b01span00Question 1:02span02b00 Please give me an example where 01i00around02i00 is used as an adverb.02span02p

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01span01span01span01b00Question 2:02b02span00 Is 01i00around02i00 being used as a preposition in the following sentence?02span02span02p

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01span01span00Phileas Fogg circumnavigated 01i01b00around02b02i00 the world in 80 days02span00.02span02p

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01span01b01span00Question 3:02span02b00 Which of the following sentences is more correct to say?02span02p

01ol
    01li
  1. 01span01b001:02b00 Is 01i00around02i00 being used as a preposition in the following sentence?02span02li
  2. 01li
  3. 01span01b002:02b00 Is 01i00around02i00 used as a preposition in the following sentence?u02span02li
  4. 02ol
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Top answer

12p 12blockquote 11p 01span 001. 02i 02span 02p 01p 01span 002. 02span 02span 02span 02p 00 0-

  • 12p 12blockquote 11p 01span 001.
  • 02i 02span 02p 01p 01span 002.
  • 02span 02span 02span 02p 00 0-
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16 Answers
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*71*0 01blockquote
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11b11span10Question 1:12span12b10 Please give me an example where 11i10around12i10 is used as an adverb.12p

12blockquote
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01span001. In the sense of 'surrounding a place': 01i00all ar

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1span00Round can work as a noun, an adjective, a verb, 01u00an adverb02u00 and a preposition. Around can work as an 01u00adverb02u00 or a preposition. Round and around both can be used as adverb and preposition.02span02br
01span00Then are the following sentences
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0'Round' and 'around' as adverbs don't necessarily have the same definitions. 02br
02br
01i00All round was an expanse of white snow. [Y]02i02br
02br
01i00The newspaper must be somewhere round. [N]02i0-
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0 01blockquote
01cite10Jackson661212cite11font11i10the newspaper must be somewhere 11b10round12b10.12i12font12br
12blockquote
10In that context round refers to shape. For example a circular table.0-
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0 01blockquote
01cite10Bokeh12cite11blockquote
11cite20Jackson661222cite22br
21font21i20the newspaper must be somewhere 21b20round22b20.22i22font22br
22br
22blockquote
20In that context round ref
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0 No!02br
00The newspaper is somewhere round. It's on the round table.02br
00The newspaper is somewhere green. It's on the lawn.0-
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0 01blockquote
01cite10Bokeh12cite10No!12br
10The newspaper is somewhere round. It's on the round table.12br
10The newspaper is somewhere green. It's on the lawn.12br
12blockquote
10These sentences evoke a game of treasure hunt or something like that!0-
0
0 01blockquote
01cite10Bokeh12cite10No!12br
10The newspaper is somewhere round. It's on the round table.12br
10The newspaper is somewhere green. It's on the lawn.12br
12blockquote
11i01b01font00The newspaper must be somewhere round02font00 = 01
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0 01blockquote
01cite10Jackson661212cite11blockquote
11cite20Bokeh22cite20No!22br
20The newspaper is somewhere round. It's on the round table.22br
20The newspaper is somewhere green. It's on the lawn.22br
22blockquote
21i11b11font
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0 01i01b01font00The newspaper must be somewhere round. --> 02font02b02i00The newspaper must be (located) somewhere (that is) round. 02br
02br
00This is not really a sentence I would expect to hear, however.02br
02br
00This sentence has the same structure:02br
01i0

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