0
Polytheist Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

“XYZ.Com's Corporate Identity Set” vs. “Corporate Identity Set of XYZ.Com”

I have designed some stationary items (such as letterhead and business card) for a website/brand (XYZ.Com for instance), I need help to choose the correct sentence among sentences below:

  1. The XYZ.Com's Corporate Identity Set
  2. The XYZ.Com Corporate Identity Set
  3. The Corporate Identity Set of XYZ.Com

But I think the determiner "the" should have not been added to either of the sentences above. Right?

I guess neither of the sentences above is correct, the correct sentence would be something like "XYZ.Com Corporate Identity".

  

Top answer

Polytheist But I think the determiner "the" should have not been added to either any of the sentences above. "either" means there are two, but you have three. Use "any" instead.

  • Polytheist But I think the determiner "the" should have not been added to either any of the sentences above.
  • "either" means there are two, but you have three.
  • Use "any" instead.
  • Polytheist the determiner "the" should have not been added Generally speaking you can't have two determiners in a row.
  • Com's) is a determiner.
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
PolytheistBut I think the determiner "the" should have not been added to either any of the sentences above.

"either" means there are two, but you have three. Use "any" instead.

Polytheistthe determiner "the" should have not been added

Generally speaking you can

Related Questions