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Takehisa Tanaka Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

How can I understand this "from"?

Hi. I have a question.
I can't understand how I understand this "from" in this sentence:
Bennis, who died two years ago, would have loved "Why Organizations Don't Learn," an HBR article from last November by Francesca Gino, of Harvard Business School, and Bradley Staats, of the University of North Carolina's Kenan-Flagler Business School.

I can't figure out how to understand "from" in the above sentence.
An HBR article was published in last November?
Or, November is the name of a magazine?

Could you tell me, please?

  

Top answer

The word "last" before "November" would indicate that it is the month of November being referred to, specifically, November 2017 or November 2018, depending on the context. That is, an article in the Nov. 2017, or Nov.

  • The word "last" before "November" would indicate that it is the month of November being referred to, specifically, November 2017 or November 2018, depending on the context.
  • That is, an article in the Nov.
  • 2017, or Nov.
  • 2018, HBR.
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2 Answers
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The word "last" before "November" would indicate that it is the month of November being referred to, specifically,

November 2017 or November 2018, depending on the context. That is, an article in the Nov. 2017, or Nov. 2018, HBR.

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Takehisa TanakaAn HBR article was published in last November?

Yes.

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