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An Jiyoung Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

One tree each of two kinds

Hello,

You can get one from each of 2 kinds of trees.
You can get one tree each of two kinds.

Are the above two sentences same meaning and correct grammatically?
I would like to say..

You can get two trees of each kind.
It means two trees are different kind.

Thanks..
  

Top answer

You can get two trees, each of a different kind. [Any species, just 2 different ones]. You can get two trees, one of each kind.

  • You can get two trees, each of a different kind.
  • [Any species, just 2 different ones].
  • You can get two trees, one of each kind.
  • [For this, you would have already mentioned the species/type of tree in a previous sentence.
  • "Ash and maple are both nice.
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1 Answers
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You can get two trees, each of a different kind. [Any species, just 2 different ones].
You can get two trees, one of each kind. [For this, you would have already mentioned the species/type of tree in a previous sentence. "Ash and maple are both nice. You can get two trees, one of each kind".]

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