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Angliholic Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

more serious politicians

OMRLP memebers have tow main goals. The first is to point out what they see as the silliness and the craziness of more serious politicians in England's main political parties.

Hi,
Does the bolded part in the above mean "the silliness and the craziness of more important politicians in England's main political parties, and the silliness and the craziness are what they consider to be so?"

Besides, is "serious" in the bolded part equal to "important?" Thanks.
  

Top answer

They see the silliness, etc in the serious politicians. Serious and important are not synonyms.

  • They see the silliness, etc in the serious politicians.
  • Serious and important are not synonyms.
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1 Answers
0
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They see the silliness, etc in the serious politicians.

Serious and important are not synonyms.

.

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