0
Anonymous Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

What do these sentences mean?

Do these sentences mean that a person would have taken only these two exams or more two?
1. She had always enjoyed history classes at school and it was one of the subjects she passed at exams. French was another.

2. She had always enjoyed history classes at school and it was one of the subjects she passed at exams. French was the other.

Do these this sentence have the same meaning as the first sentences (1)?
He had always enjoyed history classes in school and it was one of the subjects he passed at A Level. French was another, so line of time and foreign language were of the same importance to him.
  

Top answer

Hi, Do these sentences mean that a person would have taken only these two exams or more two? 1. She had always enjoyed history classes at school and it was one of the subjects she passed at exams.

  • Hi, Do these sentences mean that a person would have taken only these two exams or more two?
  • 1.
  • She had always enjoyed history classes at school and it was one of the subjects she passed at exams.
  • French was another.
  • No.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
Hi,

Do these sentences mean that a person would have taken only these two exams or more two?

1. She had always enjoyed history classes at school and it was one of the subjects she passed at exams. French was another. No. There could be others. French is just an example.

If there were no more, I'd often say 'French was the other'.

2. She had always enj

Related Questions