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Anonymous Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

When to use "the"

What rule applies to explain why you have to say, "All the teachers are alloted forty-five minutes per session," as opposed to, "All teachers are alloted forty-five minutes per session."

Thanks for your help.
  

Top answer

". I don't know any such rule. Nevertheless, if you refer to "all the teachers", you refer to a set of teachers already known to the reader.

  • ".
  • I don't know any such rule.
  • Nevertheless, if you refer to "all the teachers", you refer to a set of teachers already known to the reader.
  • Perhaps these teachers were discussed earlier and for this reason your reader knows which group of teachers you are talking about.
  • "all teachers", taken very strictly, can mean "all the teachers in the world", which is probably not the intended meaning.
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1 Answers
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AnonymousWhat rule applies to explain why you have to say, "All the teachers are alloted forty-five minutes per session," as opposed to, "All teachers are alloted forty-five minutes per session."
I don't agree that you have to say "All the teachers ...". I don't know any such rule.

Nevertheless, if you refer to "all the teachers", you refer to

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