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Anonymous Posted 9 years ago
Grammar

People or The people?

"I've been looking at the people from England to France" or "I've been looking at people from England to France"?
  

Top answer

Both are OK.

  • Both are OK.
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5 Answers
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Thank you for your quick reply!
And what is the difference between those two sentences? (if there are any differences)
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people from England to France

I don't understand what this phrase means.
eg Do you mean this?

people who live in England and France
people who migrate from England to France.
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I mean "people who live in England and people who live in France"
It's like: I've been to several countries (such as England and France) so I've been looking at the people from England to France.
But I don't know if I can say it this way...
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I've been to many countries, and I like the French and the English better than the Italians or the Russians.

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