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"All of this" vs "All of these" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
10. I've read/heard people saying "all of this" and "all of these" where this and these both refer to some plural entity. Are there any differences in using this and these in this way? I'm guessing that the answer is that it doesn't matter, but wanted to make sure. For example (taken from here)
OF | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary
used after words or phrases expressing amount, number, or a particular unit: a pound of apples. tons of food. hundreds of people. most of them. none of them. both of us. a third of all people. a speck of dust. a drop of rain. More examples. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. of preposition (CONTAINING) A1.
Of - Grammar - Cambridge Dictionary
from English Grammar Today. Of is a preposition. Of commonly introduces prepositional phrases which are complements of nouns, creating the pattern: noun + of + noun. This pattern is very common, especially to indicate different parts, pieces, amounts and groups: Lima is the capital of Peru.
What is another word for this - WordHippo
(demonstrative) Used to make a comparison with something implied by context. such. that. these. those. them. dem. dat. dis. the particular. the above-mentioned. Determiner. . A grammatical article that implies an entity it articulates was previously mentioned. an. each. one. the. that. Determiner.
This, that, these, those - Grammar - Cambridge Dictionary
from English Grammar Today. This, that, these and those are demonstratives. We use this, that, these and those to point to people and things. This and that are singular. These and those are plural. We use them as determiners and pronouns. This, that, these, those as determiners. Pointing to things.
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