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Navy car 355 Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

"Over a decade": Is there a cutoff?

I was having a conversation with someone and they stated that the term "over a decade" only constitutes 11 to 14 years, with 15 years taking it over that point. On the other hand, I feel that "over a decade" could mean anything between 10 and 20 years. Is there a cutoff point where "over a decade" just becomes "two decades" besides getting to 20 years?

  

Top answer

navy car 355 they stated that the term "over a decade" only constitutes 11 to 14 years, with 15 years taking it over that point That is a bit strict as an interpretation, to my mind. However, everyone has his own concept of how much is 'over', 'under', 'about', 'a few', etc. There is no rule.

  • navy car 355 they stated that the term "over a decade" only constitutes 11 to 14 years, with 15 years taking it over that point That is a bit strict as an interpretation, to my mind.
  • However, everyone has his own concept of how much is 'over', 'under', 'about', 'a few', etc.
  • There is no rule.
  • navy car 355 On the other hand, I feel that "over a decade" could mean anything between 10 and 20 years.
  • That seems a bit liberal to me.
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1 Answers
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navy car 355they stated that the term "over a decade" only constitutes 11 to 14 years, with 15 years taking it over that point

That is a bit strict as an interpretation, to my mind. However, everyone has his own concept of how much is 'over', 'under', 'about', 'a few', etc. There is no rule.

navy car 355On the other hand, I feel

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