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- Path: sparky!uunet!destroyer!fmsrl7!lynx.unm.edu!carina.unm.edu!maya
- From: maya@carina.unm.edu ()
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.words-l
- Subject: Re: Gleanings (76)
- Date: 25 Jan 1993 16:21:42 GMT
- Organization: University of New Mexico, Albuquerque
- Lines: 31
- Message-ID: <1k142mINN70u@lynx.unm.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: carina.unm.edu
-
- >> Are the following sentences exactly the same in meaning?
- >> If not, how different are they from each other?
- >> 1) How much do you spend a week?
- >> 2) How much do you spend per week?
- >> 3) How much do you spend in a week?
- >> 4) How much a week do you spend?
- >> 5) How much do you spend every week?
- >> 6) How much do you spend each week?
-
-
-
- To me,
- (2) implies a statistical average. My insurance company tells
- me that my insurance costs me "...just $17 per week..." when I think of
- it as costing me $900 once a year. If somebody were to ask me (for instance)
- "How much do you spend in a week upon insurance?" my first thought would
- be "Nothing". In fact, now that I'm thinking about it, (2) implies a
- statistical mean and (3), (4), and maybe (6) imply the mode. If somebody
- were to ask me (3) I would assume they meant "most normal weeks".
- I don't know that (5) implies this, but I would expect to find somebody
- using a sentence of that construction when curious about the base
- expense - "Some weeks we have to buy T-shirts, but every week we have to
- spend X amount on Bernard.". I only meant to discuss number (2), but in
- the hot thrill of classification I would put number (1) with number (2)
- as indicating a mean expenditure.
- I'm not sure this was especially helpful to anybody but me - it
- sure put off the grading of papers for a bit.
-
- -maya (whose cat Simone was so very very good at the vet yesterday that
- I just have to brag about it)
-
-