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1 Post By Winwin2011 -
4 Post By 5jj -
3 Post By Tdol -
4 Post By 5jj
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their cakes/its cake
I read the following sentence from Collins English conversation Book 2.
"I think their cakes are the best in town."
When we are talking about the quality of cakes in a cake shop, is it natural to use 'its' instead of 'their'?
I think its cake is the best in town.
Thanks.
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Re: their cakes/its cake

Originally Posted by
Winwin2011
"I think their cakes are the best in town."
That's fine.
When we are talking about the quality of cakes in a cake shop, is it natural to use 'its' instead of 'their'?
I think its cake is the best in town.
'Their' is more natural than 'its', in my opinion. We'd use 'cakes' rather than 'cake' unless we were talking about a specific type, such as 'Christmas cake'.
Last edited by Tdol; 13-Nov-2012 at 12:31.
Reason: Fixing Quote tag
Context is important. Please provide enough for us to be able to deal effectively with your question.
Your thread title should include all or part of the word/phrase being discussed.
If you just want to know the meaning of a word, try OneLook Dictionary Search first.
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Re: their cakes/its cake
Both are correct, but their sounds more natural to me (BrE speaker), though speakers of other variants of English may feel differently.
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Re: their cakes/its cake

Originally Posted by
Tdol
Both are correct, but
their sounds more natural to me (
BrE speaker), though speakers of other variants of English may feel differently.
Thanks Tdol.
Is " I think its cakes are the best in town." correct?
Is " I think its cake is the best in town." wrong?
Thanks.
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Re: their cakes/its cake

Originally Posted by
Winwin2011
Is " I think its cakes are the best in town." correct?
Is " I think its cake is the best in town." wrong?
The first is OK, but both Tdol and I find 'their' more natural. The second is not wrong, but ... oh, re-read the earlier posts.
Context is important. Please provide enough for us to be able to deal effectively with your question.
Your thread title should include all or part of the word/phrase being discussed.
If you just want to know the meaning of a word, try OneLook Dictionary Search first.
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