
What is the difference(or how do i say it correctly)(what senteces are completely wrong)
He only had to show that ...
He had only to show that ...
He had to only show that ...
He had to show only that ...
He had to show that only ...
Thanx.
rightAnton wrote: He only had to show that ...
wrongAnton wrote: He had only to show that ...
completely wrongAnton wrote: He had to only show that ...
depends on what the sentence should expressAnton wrote: He had to show only that ...
depends on what the sentence should expressAnton wrote: He had to show that only ...
Well, I'm not American, but I'm a native English speaker and subject to the considerable influence of the American cultural hegemony.Anton wrote: What is the difference(or how do i say it correctly)(what senteces are completely wrong)
This is good grammar and means that he could demonstrate conditions sufficient for the purpose at hand.Anton wrote:He only had to show that ...
This is also good grammar and is subtly different in meaning to the above, in that it implies that he could demonstrate a condition that was both necessary and sufficient, in the mathematical sense.Anton wrote:He had only to show that ....
This is a split infinitive and is frowned on by some grammatical authorities but is in general use and is accepted by the more enlightened. It is identical in meaning to the above. For another use of split infinitive, watch the opening of the original Star Trek series, in which the voiceover proudly states that their mission is "to boldly go...."Anton wrote:He had to only show that ....
Correct grammar, and could be interpreted identically to the above or, alternatively, indicates that what he had to show was restricted in some way. The exact meaning would depend on the context.Anton wrote:He had to show only that ....
Grammatically correct, but because the antecedent of the adverb is something in the objective phrase following the verb, there are two possible meanings. One is pretty much identical to all of the above ('had' is used as an auxiliary when conjugating 'to show' in the past tense), the other is in the imperative voice with a completely different meaning. Only context would allow you distinguish.Anton wrote:He had to show that only ...