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Diegofilbal Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

The outside from inside

Hi, guys!

I wanted to write a sentence that could express a view from inside of something outside, like a picture from the inside the car that shows a sunset, for example.

Among the sentences below, which one (if there is at least one) express better what I'm trying to say?

  • Outside from inside;
  • Outside from the inside;
  • The outside from inside;
  • The outside from the inside;

In this case, I don't know if the articles changes the meaning of the sentence, please help me.

If these sentences aren't making any sense, comment yours here please, I really wanna know how to say this.

Feel free to to correct me, my English is not that good, but I'm working on it!

  

Top answer

diegofilbal Outside from inside;Outside from the inside;The outside from inside;The outside from the inside; None of those are anywhere near being sentences. All of them seem to mean what you are saying. There is no way of judging among them as they stand in isolation.

  • diegofilbal Outside from inside;Outside from the inside;The outside from inside;The outside from the inside; None of those are anywhere near being sentences.
  • All of them seem to mean what you are saying.
  • There is no way of judging among them as they stand in isolation.
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1 Answers
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diegofilbalOutside from inside;Outside from the inside;The outside from inside;The outside from the inside;

None of those are anywhere near being sentences.

All of them seem to mean what you are saying.

There is no way of judging among them as they stand in isolation.

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