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Thanh tu 123 Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

Recent years have seen the end of the virtual "monopoly on/ of" cork as the material for bottle stoppers.

"Recent years have seen the end of the virtual "monopoly on/ of" cork as the material for bottle stoppers."

please explain to me in this case "monopoly on/monopoly in" should be used and why

  

Top answer

thanh tu 123 please explain to me in this case "monopoly on/monopoly in" should be used and why Every written English sentence begins with a capital letter and ends with a suitable mark of punctuation. You should already know this. Your writing looks like it was done by a six-year-old if you don't follow the basic rules.

  • thanh tu 123 please explain to me in this case "monopoly on/monopoly in" should be used and why Every written English sentence begins with a capital letter and ends with a suitable mark of punctuation.
  • You should already know this.
  • Your writing looks like it was done by a six-year-old if you don't follow the basic rules.
  • In the sample sentence, you have "on/of".
  • In your question, you have "on/in".
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2 Answers
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thanh tu 123please explain to me in this case "monopoly on/monopoly in" should be used and why

Every written English sentence begins with a capital letter and ends with a suitable mark of punctuation. You should already know this. Your writing looks like it was done by a six-year-old if you don't follow the basic rules.

In the sample sentence, you hav

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thanh tu 123monopoly on / of

The approximate difference goes like this:

the monopoly of the government ~ the government has the monopoly on something (lithium, iron ore, cork, etc.)

the monopoly on cork ~ someone (some country, some industry, some government, etc.) has the monopoly on cork

Thus, you can have bot

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