0
Anonymous Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

need help

Hello, I am new here
Can someone please help me with this expression?
Ok, it's this: A LATE WAR VERSION and it refers to a gun.
It means "a version of the gun from the last period of the war" or "A recent war version"?
Thank you in advance.
  

Top answer

I would take "late" as "recent," meaning the model was developed during, or especially for a recent conflict; or that it was recently developed for purposes of war fighting in general. " Best wishes, - A.

  • I would take "late" as "recent," meaning the model was developed during, or especially for a recent conflict; or that it was recently developed for purposes of war fighting in general.
  • " Best wishes, - A.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
I would take "late" as "recent," meaning the model was developed during, or especially for a recent conflict; or that it was recently developed for purposes of war fighting in general.

It could be taken to mean that this particular model was used only during the late stages of the war, but this must be in a discussion in which a particular war is identified, and earl
0
Thank you,

your answer is precious..I've appreciated it.

Best wishes to you, Y.

Related Questions