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Nhật Bình Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Sentence

These two sentences have the same meaning, don't they?

It is clever of Peter to choose to work in Nancy's team.

It is clever of Peter to work in Nancy's team.

  

Top answer

t Bình These two sentences have the same meaning, don't they? In the first case Peter has an explicit choice, but you might deduce some sort of choice in the second case, so they amount to the same thing in the end. " on Nancy's team", by the way.

  • t Bình These two sentences have the same meaning, don't they?
  • In the first case Peter has an explicit choice, but you might deduce some sort of choice in the second case, so they amount to the same thing in the end.
  • " on Nancy's team", by the way.
  • CJ
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1 Answers
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Nh?t BìnhThese two sentences have the same meaning, don't they?

In the first case Peter has an explicit choice, but you might deduce some sort of choice in the second case, so they amount to the same thing in the end.

"on Nancy's team", by the way.

CJ

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