Hi guys, Please check. "One of them must die in order for other person to win".
T tufguy VIP Member Joined Feb 4, 2014 Location India Member Type Student or Learner Native Language Hindi Home Country India Current Location India Jul 11, 2014 #1 Hi guys, Please check. "One of them must die in order for other person to win".
Raymott VIP Member Joined Jun 29, 2008 Member Type Academic Native Language English Home Country Australia Current Location Australia Jul 11, 2014 #2 That's fine. A bit brutal, but grammatical.
O Odessa Dawn Key Member Joined Aug 10, 2012 Member Type Student or Learner Native Language Arabic Home Country Saudi Arabia Current Location Saudi Arabia Jul 11, 2014 #3 "One of them must die in order for the other person to win". Would you accept a 'the'? Last edited: Jul 11, 2014
Raymott VIP Member Joined Jun 29, 2008 Member Type Academic Native Language English Home Country Australia Current Location Australia Jul 11, 2014 #4 Thanks, yes, you are right. I missed the 'the'.
T tufguy VIP Member Joined Feb 4, 2014 Location India Member Type Student or Learner Native Language Hindi Home Country India Current Location India Jul 11, 2014 #5 Ok I have to remove "The".
R Rover_KE Moderator Staff member Joined Jun 20, 2010 Member Type Retired English Teacher Native Language British English Home Country England Current Location England Jul 11, 2014 #6 No — you have to add 'the' before 'other'.
Boris Tatarenko Senior Member Joined May 6, 2013 Member Type Student or Learner Native Language Russian Home Country Russian Federation Current Location Russian Federation Jul 12, 2014 #7 Is my sentence correct? One of them must die in order to win for the other person.
bhaisahab Moderator Staff member Joined Apr 12, 2008 Member Type Retired English Teacher Native Language British English Home Country England Current Location Ireland Jul 12, 2014 #8 Boris Tatarenko said: Is my sentence correct? One of them must die in order to win for the other person. Click to expand... No.
Boris Tatarenko said: Is my sentence correct? One of them must die in order to win for the other person. Click to expand... No.
Matthew Wai VIP Member Joined Nov 29, 2013 Member Type Native Language Chinese Home Country China Current Location China Jul 12, 2014 #9 "One of them must die for the other person to win". "In order" is omitted, does it make sense?
R Rover_KE Moderator Staff member Joined Jun 20, 2010 Member Type Retired English Teacher Native Language British English Home Country England Current Location England Jul 12, 2014 #10 Yes.