I'm a Chubby Baby
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- Joined
- Dec 18, 2020
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Chinese
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- China
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- China
Thanks, emsr2d2, but I'm trying to make comparisons. The question asks us to make comparisons where relevant. Besides, it didn't happen that rapidly. It took 60 years.In my opinion, you don't need that entire section at all.
Almost no households had a refrigerator in 1920. However, that rapidly changed and by 1980 every household had one.
The problem is that "it" has no antecedent. Try Ownership increased rapidly until, by 1980, there was one in every household.Almost no households had a refrigerator in 1920. However, it showed the greatest increase in ownership and by 1980 there was one in every household.
I feel the bold doesn't sound natural.
Almost no households had a refrigerator in 1920.
Thanks, do you mean I should use the verb 'own' with people, but use the verb 'have' with 'households'?You can use "refrigerator owners" but it wouldn't be what most native speakers would say. We probably wouldn't refer to households either.
In 1920, almost no one owned a refrigerator.
Yes.Thanks, do you mean I should use the verb 'own' with people, but use the verb 'have' with 'households'?.
In 1920, almost no one owned a refrigerator. In 1920, almost no households had a refrigerator.
"No households" = zero households. Zero is plural.(Also, why households not household? )
Try Ownership increased rapidly until, by 1980, there was one in every household.
Almost no households had a refrigerator in 1920. However, that rapidly changed and by 1980 every household had one.
Thanks.It's grammatically correct but not natural.
Thanks.
Almost no households had refrigerators in 1920. However, ownership increased rapidly and by 1980 they were in every household.
Are both the red and green unnatural, or only the red unnatural? I understand the red is unnatural because it is a negative sentence.
Is this positive sentence natural?
40% of households had washing machines in 1920.
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