I think both are grammatically correct and mean the same thing. "British history has been a history" however is awkward and grates. Britain has a history of reads better. IMO.
I think both are grammatically correct and mean the same thing. "British history has been a history" however is awkward and grates. Britain has a history of reads better. IMO.
Using 'history' twice in the same sentence? How about, '...history has been an account of these...'?
And maybe 'idiots' is carrying too much of a judgemental tone.
Good question
if you google ' meaning of each ' - the ABers have it
however - nouns around as single or plural BUT there is also 'dual' meaning (two) which you learn in Ancient Greek but has ceased around 350BC ( when the OT was translated into Greek'
You still get it in Arabic
all in arabic ( kull ) has a dual ( killair ) and is usually translated as 'both'
Lequel in Fransh means which of two innit ?
duals are pretty uncommon in indo-european languages
pair is a collective noun for two - brace is as well - twins ......
Some DO say "each other" if there are only two folk involved and "one another" if there are more. I had a look online and there are arguments for and against it but I would tend to support the "one another" if more than two are involved.
"Killing each other", to me carries a suggestion of a mutual action between two people, rather unlikely in this case. So I'm more comfortable with the second option, but I don't think it's particularly critical.
Lequel ( laquelle. lesquels, lesquelles) means which one (ones). If you are given a choice of any number from two upwards you would be asked Lequel (etc) voulez-vous?
I have no problem in pronouncing the word 'les' before a vowel. It is lez. However I do have a problem with words beginning with 'oi'. Is it ley oiseaux or leyz oiseaux? I can never remember, as the former sounds easier to say.