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Which one is grammatically correct or better Which of the above sentences is. I have two assignments, one of them is done

I have two assignments, one of which is done We had seven employees one of which could speak french fluently I watched a video tutorial that the teacher said the.

Recently i've come across sentences that doesn't have one in it and it looks like odd to me because i'm used to say which one.? the sentences must be correct because they are from a.

In the construction one of the [plural noun] who., should the verb agree with one or [plural noun] For example, which of the two following sentences is grammatically correct?. In general one each may be replaced by one of each with only stylistic damage The comma after primitive data types is wrong and confusing, however

It should be a colon As @petershor points out, in this case one is the pronoun, and would never be numeric I want to know what the constraints are on using the phrase one of the Is it used correctly in this example

He is one of the soldiers who fight for their country.

Both a/an and one mean one The difference is that one puts more emphasis on the number such as i have 4 computers and a printer/i have 4 computers and only one printer So when you say a. As an american, i mostly hear “on the one hand,” but use only “on one hand.” by the vagaries of fate, i'm a linguist

One in “one hand” is a determiner, and two. We had seven employees one of whom could speak french fluently

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