0
My Celine Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

year 2

Which of the following is correct?

E.g.: I am year 2.

E.g.: I am in year 2.
  

Top answer

'

  • '
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.

5 Answers
0
Lacking a context, I'd have to go with, 'I am in year two.'
0
I would also prefer the second one.

"I am in year 2"
0
Hi,

You can also say I'm a second-year student.

Best wishes, Clive
0


You can also say I'm a second-year student.

Unless, of course, it's in a different context than schooling: I'm in year two of my recuperation. I'm in year two of a long-term experiment. I'm in year two of The One Hundred Years of Twentieth Century Music. Etc.
0
I'd say there was a slight difference:

"I'm in year two" answers a question that implies "what year are you in?", etc.

"I'm year two" answers a question that implies "what stage of the course are you at?", etc.

"I'm a year two" would seem to answer either.

Or am I imagining things?

MrP

Related Questions