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Anonymous Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

Is this grammatically correct?

"The bean its origin" ?
  

Top answer

Anonymous "The bean its origin" ? What is the origin of a been?

  • Anonymous "The bean its origin" ?
  • What is the origin of a been?
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7 Answers
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Anonymous"The bean its origin" ?
What is the origin of a been?
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I wrote
"You can also see the bean its origin, the soil."
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It's not clear what you want to say. Could you, please, rephrase that?
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Okay, I'm sorry:
In my english class test I had to describe an ad and wrote the following sentence:
"The brown color in both parts probably stands for coffee itself, as coffee beans are brown. It could also stand for the bean its origin, the ground/soil."
My teacher and I aren't sure about the "the bean its origin" part.
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Anonymousthe bean its origin, .
This part is not correct grammatically as its can't be preceded by a noun (you need at least a comma). But even if you put and between bean and origin, the sentence will still be flawed, meaning-wise.

Perhaps you can use

...represents the /coffee/ bean (itself) or soil where coffee plants grow.
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I think you're trying to say "the bean's origin."
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Anonymous"The bean its origin" ?
Which came first - the bean or the vine?

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