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Thanks3 Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

"get sense of" and "get a sense of" are different meaning?

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Q3. "get sense of" and "get a sense of" are different meaning?

  

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thanks3 Q3. "get sense of" and "get a sense of" are different meaning? Do "get sense of" and "get a sense of" have different meanings?

  • thanks3 Q3.
  • "get sense of" and "get a sense of" are different meaning?
  • Do "get sense of" and "get a sense of" have different meanings?
  • Yes.
  • I can't think of a context for "get sense of".
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thanks3Q3. "get sense of" and "get a sense of" are different meaning?

Do "get sense of" and "get a sense of" have different meanings?

Yes. I can't think of a context for "get sense of". To get a sense of something is to arrive at some understanding of the thing, or to feel the thing as a result.

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