The use of ‘other’ vs ‘another’ pronoun
I am struggling with choosing the suitable pronoun in the following sentence.
He wrote other / another two letters in just 15 minutes.
My intuition tells me that in this case, ‘another’ is the pronoun that should be used–as it makes the most sense as far as the context (he has written the letters in just 15 minutes) is concerned. But, on the other hand, a friend of mine claims that either the use of ‘other’ here is correct or it is the only option by using which the sentence is grammatically correct.
The question is: are both of these pronouns grammatically and logically correct, or is there an only option? If so, which one is it?
Thank you in advance.
grammaticality
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I am struggling with choosing the suitable pronoun in the following sentence.
He wrote other / another two letters in just 15 minutes.
My intuition tells me that in this case, ‘another’ is the pronoun that should be used–as it makes the most sense as far as the context (he has written the letters in just 15 minutes) is concerned. But, on the other hand, a friend of mine claims that either the use of ‘other’ here is correct or it is the only option by using which the sentence is grammatically correct.
The question is: are both of these pronouns grammatically and logically correct, or is there an only option? If so, which one is it?
Thank you in advance.
grammaticality
3
With the current structure of that sentence, only another is grammatical. But you could restructure it to admit other: "He wrote two other letters...".
– Dan Bron
Oct 24 '18 at 18:56
Related, I think: english.stackexchange.com/questions/252173/…, english.stackexchange.com/questions/9933/…
– sumelic
Oct 25 '18 at 1:39
add a comment |
I am struggling with choosing the suitable pronoun in the following sentence.
He wrote other / another two letters in just 15 minutes.
My intuition tells me that in this case, ‘another’ is the pronoun that should be used–as it makes the most sense as far as the context (he has written the letters in just 15 minutes) is concerned. But, on the other hand, a friend of mine claims that either the use of ‘other’ here is correct or it is the only option by using which the sentence is grammatically correct.
The question is: are both of these pronouns grammatically and logically correct, or is there an only option? If so, which one is it?
Thank you in advance.
grammaticality
I am struggling with choosing the suitable pronoun in the following sentence.
He wrote other / another two letters in just 15 minutes.
My intuition tells me that in this case, ‘another’ is the pronoun that should be used–as it makes the most sense as far as the context (he has written the letters in just 15 minutes) is concerned. But, on the other hand, a friend of mine claims that either the use of ‘other’ here is correct or it is the only option by using which the sentence is grammatically correct.
The question is: are both of these pronouns grammatically and logically correct, or is there an only option? If so, which one is it?
Thank you in advance.
grammaticality
grammaticality
asked Oct 24 '18 at 18:48
MeehoweqMeehoweq
111
111
3
With the current structure of that sentence, only another is grammatical. But you could restructure it to admit other: "He wrote two other letters...".
– Dan Bron
Oct 24 '18 at 18:56
Related, I think: english.stackexchange.com/questions/252173/…, english.stackexchange.com/questions/9933/…
– sumelic
Oct 25 '18 at 1:39
add a comment |
3
With the current structure of that sentence, only another is grammatical. But you could restructure it to admit other: "He wrote two other letters...".
– Dan Bron
Oct 24 '18 at 18:56
Related, I think: english.stackexchange.com/questions/252173/…, english.stackexchange.com/questions/9933/…
– sumelic
Oct 25 '18 at 1:39
3
3
With the current structure of that sentence, only another is grammatical. But you could restructure it to admit other: "He wrote two other letters...".
– Dan Bron
Oct 24 '18 at 18:56
With the current structure of that sentence, only another is grammatical. But you could restructure it to admit other: "He wrote two other letters...".
– Dan Bron
Oct 24 '18 at 18:56
Related, I think: english.stackexchange.com/questions/252173/…, english.stackexchange.com/questions/9933/…
– sumelic
Oct 25 '18 at 1:39
Related, I think: english.stackexchange.com/questions/252173/…, english.stackexchange.com/questions/9933/…
– sumelic
Oct 25 '18 at 1:39
add a comment |
1 Answer
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Say the original sentence was "He wrote two letters"
Another has an article within it (it's an other), so "he wrote another two letters" makes sense
Other doesn't have an article in it already, so "he wrote other two letters" is missing something, but "he wrote the other two letters" is correct.
it's the same for other adjectives too: "He took a big two bites" or "he took the big two bites" but not "he took big two bites"
it has something to do with adjective order and stuff; either way, you're right on both counts
New contributor
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Say the original sentence was "He wrote two letters"
Another has an article within it (it's an other), so "he wrote another two letters" makes sense
Other doesn't have an article in it already, so "he wrote other two letters" is missing something, but "he wrote the other two letters" is correct.
it's the same for other adjectives too: "He took a big two bites" or "he took the big two bites" but not "he took big two bites"
it has something to do with adjective order and stuff; either way, you're right on both counts
New contributor
add a comment |
Say the original sentence was "He wrote two letters"
Another has an article within it (it's an other), so "he wrote another two letters" makes sense
Other doesn't have an article in it already, so "he wrote other two letters" is missing something, but "he wrote the other two letters" is correct.
it's the same for other adjectives too: "He took a big two bites" or "he took the big two bites" but not "he took big two bites"
it has something to do with adjective order and stuff; either way, you're right on both counts
New contributor
add a comment |
Say the original sentence was "He wrote two letters"
Another has an article within it (it's an other), so "he wrote another two letters" makes sense
Other doesn't have an article in it already, so "he wrote other two letters" is missing something, but "he wrote the other two letters" is correct.
it's the same for other adjectives too: "He took a big two bites" or "he took the big two bites" but not "he took big two bites"
it has something to do with adjective order and stuff; either way, you're right on both counts
New contributor
Say the original sentence was "He wrote two letters"
Another has an article within it (it's an other), so "he wrote another two letters" makes sense
Other doesn't have an article in it already, so "he wrote other two letters" is missing something, but "he wrote the other two letters" is correct.
it's the same for other adjectives too: "He took a big two bites" or "he took the big two bites" but not "he took big two bites"
it has something to do with adjective order and stuff; either way, you're right on both counts
New contributor
New contributor
answered 3 mins ago
becca mosesbecca moses
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1
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With the current structure of that sentence, only another is grammatical. But you could restructure it to admit other: "He wrote two other letters...".
– Dan Bron
Oct 24 '18 at 18:56
Related, I think: english.stackexchange.com/questions/252173/…, english.stackexchange.com/questions/9933/…
– sumelic
Oct 25 '18 at 1:39