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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

In front seats

hi,

What's the difference between:

'Students sitting in front seats should...'and'Students sitting in the front seats should...'
  

Top answer

' T here's very little difference, and often no diference is intened. Here are a couple of comments about nuances. ' Sounds a bit like a general piece of advice.

  • ' T here's very little difference, and often no diference is intened.
  • Here are a couple of comments about nuances.
  • ' Sounds a bit like a general piece of advice.
  • eg Students sitting in front seats should never go to sleep.
  • ' Sounds a bit more specific.
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3 Answers
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Hi,

What's the difference between:

'Students sitting in front seats should...'and'Students sitting in the front seats should...'

There's very little difference, and often no diference is intened.

Here are a couple of comments about nuances.

'Students
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CliveHi,What's the difference between:'Students sitting in front seats should...'and'Students sitting in the front seats should...' There's very little difference, and often no diference is intened.Here are a couple of comments about nuances. 'Students sitting in front seats should...' Sounds a bit like a general piece of advice.eg Students sitting in front seats should n
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Hi,

Possibly. But I don't feel a strong hint.

Such things really depend a lot on the context in which they are said.

Clive

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