every spring is sure to follow

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GoodTaste

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Feb 19, 2016
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Chinese
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The use of "every" sounds odd to me. Should it be removed?


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[FONT=&quot]No winter lasts forever, every spring is sure to follow.

Source: It is from a twitter account by a Chinese[/FONT]
 
Yes, it should. Also, remove the comma and use a semicolon to separate the two clauses.

No winter lasts forever; spring is sure to follow.

"No winter lasts forever; no spring skips its turn" is the quote I'm more familiar with.
 
a Chinese
That's truncated. We don't use "a Chinese" to refer to a person.

When referring to a person:
a Chinese person/man/woman/child/author/farmer ... etc. :tick:
a Chinese :cross:

Note that in the plural, "the Chinese", is okay to refer to the Chinese people collectively.

The Chinese are famous for being prudent.
tick.gif

Chinese love seafood.
cross.gif
 
We don't use "a Chinese" to refer to a person.
And despite its resemblance to perfectly acceptable demonyms like Frenchman and Englishman, you should never refer to a person as a "Chinaman". For some reason, that term is pejorative.
 
And despite its resemblance to perfectly acceptable demonyms like Frenchman and Englishman, you should never refer to a person as a "Chinaman". For some reason, that term is pejorative.

Is "China, man" pejorative too?
 
How would you use that in a sentence?
 
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