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Sick Of english Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Help me out please!

Hi everybody!

Well, I've been trying to figure out each meaning of the expressions below but I still don't know how to differentiate them properly:

"- It's some kind of a forest with many animals around."

"-It's kind of a forest with many animals around"

"-Somehow, it's a forest with many animals around"

Do they differ that much?

Thanks!

SOE.
  

Top answer

None of them are structurally natural. It's a forest with many animals. And 'somehow' does not mean 'kind of'.

  • None of them are structurally natural.
  • It's a forest with many animals.
  • And 'somehow' does not mean 'kind of'.
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2 Answers
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None of them are structurally natural.

It's a forest with many animals.

And 'somehow' does not mean 'kind of'.
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You could say "It is the kind of forest that has many animals in it" but only if there was some other kind of forst that did not have animals. What are you trying to say here?

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