0
Anonymous Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

such a sentence or such sentence

0Hi,02br
02br
00As the subject text indicated, are the phrases, "such a sentence" and "such sentence," different?02br
02br
00If so, how are they different?0-
  

Top answer

0 00"Sentence" has two meanings. One is what you read in books or hear in everyday speeches. The other is what you can hear at court from a chief justice when he gives the judgement of justices at the final of a trial to the person accused of some crime.

  • 0 00"Sentence" has two meanings.
  • One is what you read in books or hear in everyday speeches.
  • The other is what you can hear at court from a chief justice when he gives the judgement of justices at the final of a trial to the person accused of some crime.
  • 02br 02br 00paco00 0-
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
0 00"Sentence" has two meanings. One is what you read in books or hear in everyday speeches. The other is what you can hear at court from a chief justice when he gives the judgement of justices at the final of a trial to the person accused of some crime. You can say "a sentence" or "sentences" for the first one, but the second one is always "sentence".02br
02br
00paco00

Related Questions