mafto
Junior Member
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2011
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Slovak
- Home Country
- Slovak Republic
- Current Location
- Slovak Republic
Please, help me with this thing:
Let´s think about this sentence: John is a worker and he lives in the village.
Can I just say "Worker John lives in the village?" I think I´ve never encountered anything like this. Generally, putting two nouns together with the meaning like in the example sentence seems quite rare in English.
I know that doctor John, captain John are common, but in these cases the first nouns are titles.
Apart from this, I know that Bartleby, the Scrivener is OK, but such use (John the Worker lives in the village) seems too high-styled.
Thank you in advance.
Let´s think about this sentence: John is a worker and he lives in the village.
Can I just say "Worker John lives in the village?" I think I´ve never encountered anything like this. Generally, putting two nouns together with the meaning like in the example sentence seems quite rare in English.
I know that doctor John, captain John are common, but in these cases the first nouns are titles.
Apart from this, I know that Bartleby, the Scrivener is OK, but such use (John the Worker lives in the village) seems too high-styled.
Thank you in advance.