0
Jackson6612 Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

The 17th century was more closed to 7th century, progresswise,...

Is the following sentence correct?
The 17th century was more closed to 7th century, progresswise, than it is to 21st century.
  

Top answer

No, you can't use 'closed' here. The 17th century was closer to the 7th century... Nona the Brit

  • No, you can't use 'closed' here.
  • The 17th century was closer to the 7th century...
  • Nona the Brit
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.

7 Answers
0
No, you can't use 'closed' here.

The 17th century was closer to the 7th century...

Nona the Brit
0
Hi Jackson

Grammatically speaking, your sentence needs the word 'the' in two more places:
The 17th century was more closed to the 7th century, progresswise, than it is to the 21st century.

However, I don't really understand what you're trying to say. Can you reword it?
0
YankeeHi Jackson

Grammatically speaking, your sentence needs the word 'the' in two more places:
The 17th century was more closed to the 7th century, progresswise, than it is to the 21st century.

However, I don't really understand what you're trying to say. Can you reword it?
Hi Amy,
0
Jackson6612Is the following sentence correct?
The 17th century was more closed to 7th century, progresswise, than it is to 21st century.
I would take this to mean that man in the 7th century would not comprehend the behaviour, actions and way of thought in the 17th century, unlike man in the 21st century who can comprehend
0
Feebs11
Jackson6612Is the following sentence correct?
The 17th century was more closed to 7th century, progresswise, than it is to 21st century.
I would take this to mean that man in the 7th century would not comprehend the behaviour, actions and way of thought in the 17th cent
0
Full context makes all clear.

In this extract it is obvious - it is comparing and contrasting Richard Feynman and Isaac Newton as scientists.

It really is important to make sure that you provide full context for sentences which puzzle you, if they come from a published source.
0
Feebs11Full context makes all clear.

In this extract it is obvious - it is comparing and contrasting Richard Feynman and Isaac Newton as scientists.

It really is important to make sure that you provide full context for sentences which puzzle you, if they come from a published source.
Does that mean my sentence is correct?

Related Questions