0
Roky0071 Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Difference between the injured soldier fights for life and the injured soldier fighiting for life

We often see these types of headlines in English news channel such as
1.The injured Indian soldier fights for life in the hospital.
2. The injured Indian soldier fighting for life in the hospital.
My question is that do the two sentences above carry the same meaning or not.?
  

Top answer

roky0071 do the two sentences above carry the same meaning or not.? They are not both sentences, but the intent is apparently the same.

  • roky0071 do the two sentences above carry the same meaning or not.?
  • They are not both sentences, but the intent is apparently the same.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
roky0071 do the two sentences above carry the same meaning or not.?
They are not both sentences, but the intent is apparently the same.
0
They would only make sense if whoever wrote them, had already mentioned a particular, injured Indian soldier and a particular hospital.

Related Questions