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VIicinity Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

the difference between "the cheek of him "and "his cheek "

Could you please tell me the difference between "the cheek of him "and "his cheek ",also “the death of her" and "her death ".
give me some example sentences please . Thank you .
  

Top answer

'The cheek of him' would only, if ever, refer to (his) cheekiness, whereas 'his cheek' would normally refer to the side of your face. ' talking about about an action or habit which isn't good for her, but not necessarily literally one that will kill her. -a

  • 'The cheek of him' would only, if ever, refer to (his) cheekiness, whereas 'his cheek' would normally refer to the side of your face.
  • ' talking about about an action or habit which isn't good for her, but not necessarily literally one that will kill her.
  • -a
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2 Answers
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'The cheek of him' would only, if ever, refer to (his) cheekiness, whereas 'his cheek' would normally refer to the side of your face.

To refer to how she died, you would generally talk about 'her death' and not 'the death of her'- although there is a phrase, 'Her (action/habit) will be the death of her.' talking about about an action or habit which isn't good for her, but not necessarily
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I got it.Thank you for your answer.Emotion: smile

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