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Bepleased Posted 14 years ago
Essay & Composition Writing

The two different [come] used in the two same meaning sentences

HI, We know the following sentences saying the one thing.1. Out of nothing comes nothing.2. Nothing comes from nothing.And the [comes] in (1) means [comes to] to show a thing arrives at a particular state or position, and with a strong way;the [comes] in (2) means [appears] to show a sight comes into you, and without a strong way; Could any one tell me correct or not?Thank you for your assistance.
  

Top answer

We know the following sentences saying the one thing. 1. Out of nothing comes nothing.

  • We know the following sentences saying the one thing.
  • 1.
  • Out of nothing comes nothing.
  • 2.
  • Nothing comes from nothing.
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2 Answers
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We know the following sentences saying the one thing.
1. Out of nothing comes nothing.
2. Nothing comes from nothing.
And the [comes] in (1) means [comes to] to show a thing arrives at a particular state or position-- No. In #1, the subject of the sentence is 'nothing' (the word at the end of the sentence), so 'comes' does not mean 'comes to'; it is the action of 'nothing': 'Nothi
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Hi,Thank you for your teaching.That is so clear to see, but I still yet mistake it. .

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