We have partnered with TradePub to bring you free industry magazines and resources - no coupons or credit cards required!

Visit: englishforums.tradepub.com


Share this topic:
This question is Answered
1 verified answer
Latest post Mon, Nov 2 2009 12:44 PM by Clive. 3 replies.
Suggest an answer | | |
uktous  +  959194 Sun, 01 Nov 09 08:12 PM
the level of details and the comprehensiveness of the report exceeded teacher's expectations




i use "level of details' and "comprehensiveness" to help to decribe my report.

Sorry, i need to use "exceeded teacher's expectations" because of some requirement


thanks for your opinions in advance

Best answer by Clive  +  959348 Sun, 01 Nov 09 11:34 PM
Hi,

the level of details and the comprehensiveness of the report exceeded teacher's expectations


i use "level of details' and "comprehensiveness" to help to decribe my report.

Sorry, i need to use "exceeded teacher's expectations" because of some requirement

 

It's fine. Just a few small things.

 

The level of detail and the comprehensiveness of the report exceeded the teacher's expectations.

 

Clive


 


 

 

All the other replies..
uktous  +  959467 Mon, 02 Nov 09 02:40 AM
hi, Clive,

why do you write "detail" but not "details"?


there are more than 1 detail

Clive  +  959814 Mon, 02 Nov 09 12:44 PM
Hi,

 

In expressions like these, we commonly use the singular.

eg the level of detail

eg the type of car

eg the kind of vegetable

 

Clive

© MediaCet Ltd. 2009, v5.0.3614.32638. All content posted by our users is a contribution to the public domain, this does not include imported usenet posts.*
For web related enquires please contact us on webmaster@mediacet.com, status updates are available at status.mediacet.com.
*Usenet post removal: Use 'X-No-Archive'. You may not have understood that your posts would end up in the public domain. Please send proof of the poster's email, we will remove immediately.