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Angliholic Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

Does the loyalty/faithfulness of a dog attract you

Does the loyalty/faithfulness of a dog attract you, or do you like the ease/convenience of raising a beetle.

Do either word in each pair beside slashes work in the above context and convey the same concept? Thanks.
  

Top answer

Hi, Generally speaking, yes. Don't forget the question mark. Clive.

  • Hi, Generally speaking, yes.
  • Don't forget the question mark.
  • Clive.
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3 Answers
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Hi,

Generally speaking, yes.

Don't forget the question mark.

Clive.
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Either works properly in both instances.

One way to test readability might be to combine them, such as: "Does the loyalty and faithfulness of a dog attract you, or do you like the ease and convenience of raising a beetle"

I might also add that replacing "like" with "prefer" seems to make the sentence flow better - however that is more of a personal feeling.
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Thanks, Clive and Gatekeeper.

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