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- one of A and B or one of A or B? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
If your answer to the question is “ (one of) A or B and but only one”, then you should say so in your answer — but I believe that you can’t treat “one of” as a parenthetical
- Does but one mean only one or except one? [duplicate]
Does "but one" mean "only one" or "except one"? This phrase shows up in the song "Love is an Open Door" from the movie "Frozen" The relevant line is "Our mental synchronization can have but one
- Meaning of the phrase but one in context
It is a somewhat poetic way of saying "only one" It is not generally something you'd use in everyday speech, as you would probably say "only one" But in the context of a witticism or coining a phrase, you tend to see "but one" used in place of "only one" This said, if you strictly only use "only one," you're not incorrect
- One-to-one vs. one-on-one - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
One-to-one is used when you talk about transfer or communications You may use one-to-one when you can identify a source and a destination For eg , a one-to-one email is one sent from a single person to another, i e , no ccs or bccs In maths, a one-to-one mapping maps one element of a set to a unique element in a target set One-on-one is the correct adjective in your example See Free
- Which vs Which one - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Recently I've come across sentences that doesn't have "one" in it and it looks like odd to me because I'm used to say "which one ?" The sentences must be correct because they are from a grammar
- determiners - Should I use a or one? - English Language Learners . . .
I am really struggling to understand if I should use "a" or "one" in the below example This is derived from another thread that became too confusing with the wrong examples Th
- One from another or from one another? - English Language Usage . . .
According to the corpus, from one another seems to be significantly more idiomatic than one from another: One from another seems to be preferred over from one another by people with a fixation on parsing words in sentences, because the preposition from has a clear object: another separated from (or influencing) one
- idioms - On one hand vs on the one hand. - English Language . . .
As an American, I mostly hear “on the one hand,” but use only “on one hand ” By the vagaries of fate, I'm a linguist Synchronically, the adj one in “one hand” is a determiner, and two in a row is one too many, as in **the my hand
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