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Anonymous Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Use of 'oth'

Sam drives a sports car. His brother drives a sports car.

Which of these two sentences is correct to reflect the meaning intended?

Both Sam and his brother drive sports cars OR

Both Sam and his brother drive a sports car
  

Top answer

Anonymous Sam drives a sports car. His brother drives a sports car. Which of these two sentences is correct to reflect the meaning intended?

  • Anonymous Sam drives a sports car.
  • His brother drives a sports car.
  • Which of these two sentences is correct to reflect the meaning intended?
  • Both Sam and his brother drive sports cars OR OK Both Sam and his brother drive a sports car This sounds as though they both drive one car.
  • I would say "Sam and his brother both drive sports cars"
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1 Answers
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AnonymousSam drives a sports car. His brother drives a sports car.

Which of these two sentences is correct to reflect the meaning intended?

Both Sam and his brother drive sports cars OR OK

Both Sam and his brother drive a sports car This sounds as though they both drive one car.


I would say "Sam and his brother b

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