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Razorbill2009 Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

The function of "the"

Hi anyone sees this thread

What is the difference between "the players of the club" and "players of the club" (in case that both of them are previously defined)?
  

Top answer

Hello, razorbill - and welcome to English Forums. If both are previously defined, there is no difference in intent. Perhaps it would be better if you presented an example sentence that concerns you.

  • Hello, razorbill - and welcome to English Forums.
  • If both are previously defined, there is no difference in intent.
  • Perhaps it would be better if you presented an example sentence that concerns you.
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3 Answers
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Hello, razorbill - and welcome to English Forums.

If both are previously defined, there is no difference in intent. Perhaps it would be better if you presented an example sentence that concerns you.
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Thnk U
EXm. 1: "The data of the table 5 is incorrect".

2: "Data of the table 5 is incorrect".

Thnx again
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This is correct:

The data in Table 5 are incorrect.

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