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Dileepa dharmasiri Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

How to use "the" and "adjectives" properly?

I wrote the following sentence while I was writing an essay. I know some phrases such as "the earlier the better" which use two adjectives and and "the". Having studied such sentences, I wrote the following sentence. Therefore, I would really appreciate it if someone could let me know whether the usage of "the" and the adjectives are appropriate. Furthermore, could someone please let me know should I have put a comma (",") after "career"?


The earlier someone choose a career the more probability for them to satisfy work life.


In addition, is there a name for this sentence structure in the context of grammar?

  

Top answer

dileepa dharmasiri I know some phrases such as "the earlier the better" which use two adjectives and and "the". You need to study this pattern more, because your sentence is ungrammatical. "Probability" is a noun, not an adjective.

  • dileepa dharmasiri I know some phrases such as "the earlier the better" which use two adjectives and and "the".
  • You need to study this pattern more, because your sentence is ungrammatical.
  • "Probability" is a noun, not an adjective.
  • The noun needs a verb.
  • I have bracketed the dependent clauses.
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1 Answers
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dileepa dharmasiri I know some phrases such as "the earlier the better" which use two adjectives and and "the".

You need to study this pattern more, because your sentence is ungrammatical. "Probability" is a noun, not an adjective. The noun needs a verb. I have bracketed the dependent clauses.

The earlier [ (that) someone choos

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