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Guest Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

Noun verb agreement

If i show a picture of peas and sweets to someone and ask ''What's this?''would ''It's peas "and "It's sweets" be a correct answer.If not please explain why
  

Top answer

The answer would be "It's a picture of peas and sweets" I imagine. Speakers commonly leave out "a picture of", as your post implies, so "It's peas and sweets" is another way to answer the question. Pointing to specific areas of the picture, you can say things like "These are peas", "These are sweets", of course.

  • The answer would be "It's a picture of peas and sweets" I imagine.
  • Speakers commonly leave out "a picture of", as your post implies, so "It's peas and sweets" is another way to answer the question.
  • Pointing to specific areas of the picture, you can say things like "These are peas", "These are sweets", of course.
  • CJ
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1 Answers
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The answer would be "It's a picture of peas and sweets" I imagine. Speakers commonly leave out "a picture of", as your post implies, so "It's peas and sweets" is another way to answer the question. Pointing to specific areas of the picture, you can say things like "These are peas", "These are sweets", of course.

CJ

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