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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Sentence meanings

Are both sentences correct and do they have the same meaning?

I have attached next week's article for the journal club.
I have attached the article for next week's journal club.

Thanks.
  

Top answer

I have attached the article for next week's journal club meeting .

  • I have attached the article for next week's journal club meeting .
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7 Answers
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I have attached the article for next week's journal club meeting.
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AlpheccaStarsI have attached the article for next week's journal club meeting.
Thanks for your response teacher.

How about "I have attached next week's article for our journal club meeting".

Is that also correct?
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No, because the meeting is next week, not the article.
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AlpheccaStarsNo, because the meeting is next week, not the article.
I see. But isn't the article also for next week? I don't know why is does not sound wrong to me. Can you please clarify or try to show me in detail so I can see how it is wrong, I am sure I can't see that because I am not a native speaker!
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Is the article going to be written next week, published next week, circulated next week or read next week?
It is unclear. A meeting being held next week makes perfect sense. It is obvious and clear..
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AlpheccaStarsIs the article going to be written next week, published next week, circulated next week or read next week? It is unclear. A meeting being held next week makes perfect sense. It is obvious and clear..
I honestly feel that that rationale also applies to the other sentence. Maybe it is just the fact that 'next week's meeting' makes more sense! Becau
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Anonymous Maybe it is just the fact that 'next week's meeting' makes more sense!
Right.
The relationship between time and meeting is much more direct than time and article.

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