on the inside/inside

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diamondcutter

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Oct 21, 2014
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1. Bones are hard on the outside, but they are soft on the inside.
2. Mercury is baking hot on the outside, but stone cold on the inside.


Could I rewrite these two sentences as follows?

1a. Bones are hard on the outside, but they are soft inside.
2a. Mercury is baking hot on the outside, but stone cold inside.
 
Why would you want to do that? Don't. The phrases should be in parallel: on the outside and on the inside.

(I'm not sure that it's appropriate to describe the core of Mercury as 'stone cold'!)
 
I don't mind it.

But if you want to make it more parallel, as Jut suggests, say something like:

- Bones are hard outside but soft inside.

- Mercury is hot outside but cold inside.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I think it is better to be consistent - parallelism to sound technical.
 
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