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Mosja Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

"using -- of the year" which one is better

Best literture of the year

[book cover image]


or


Literature of the year

[book cover image]

  

Top answer

"Literature of the year" seems to imply all the literature written in a given year. I don't think that's what you mean if you're following with just one book cover image. It seems you think it's the best, or you've read somewhere that it's the best, or someone told you it's the best, so you should say so: "Best Literature of the Year".

  • "Literature of the year" seems to imply all the literature written in a given year.
  • I don't think that's what you mean if you're following with just one book cover image.
  • It seems you think it's the best, or you've read somewhere that it's the best, or someone told you it's the best, so you should say so: "Best Literature of the Year".
  • CJ
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1 Answers
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"Literature of the year" seems to imply all the literature written in a given year. I don't think that's what you mean if you're following with just one book cover image.

It seems you think it's the best, or you've read somewhere that it's the best, or someone told you it's the best, so you should say so: "Best Literature of the Year".

CJ

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