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Milky Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

"The white wool knits much easier than the blue wool."

Does this sentence work for you?

"The white wool knits much easier than the blue wool."
  

Top answer

I guess, it means that you can knit easier with the white wool than the blue one, knits here is an intransitive verb.

  • I guess, it means that you can knit easier with the white wool than the blue one, knits here is an intransitive verb.
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6 Answers
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I guess, it means that you can knit easier with the white wool than the blue one, knits here is an intransitive verb.
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LinguanautI guess, it means that you can knit easier with the white wool than the blue one, knits here is an intransitive verb.
Do you like the use of "knits" there?
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There are a few examples of it on the web (all specialized sites Emotion: smile ), and it's quite understandable.

Yet I would say "white
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I'd probably say "much more easily".

MrP

PS: I have no comment to make about the ***** in front of me.
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PieanneThere are a few examples of it on the web (all specialized sites Emotion: smile ), and it's quite understandable.
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MrPedanticPS: I have no comment to make about the ***** in front of me.

Are they attached to something? ;-)

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