half of 2 is 1
There's 15% off this t shirt!
half off 2 is also 1
half of 2 is 1
There's 15% off this t shirt!
Oxford English Dictionary says....
"Used with a preceding numeral to represent a quantity in production or manufacture, or an item or number of items so produced. Usu. as one off: see ONE-OFF n. Cf. once-off adj. and n. s.v. ONCE adv. 24."
[FnG]magnolia;18050374 said:Jane had 25 of the apples but gave 5 away.
Jane had 25 off the apples but gave 5 away.
I can't see why we're debating this? It's 'of'.
It's actually 1.5![]()
It was the same when I worked as an engineer, we'd get requests for "5 off" written on schematics which were approved and that'd mean the chief engineer wanted 5 copies made etc.
T'isn't!
A half of 2 is 1, therefore a half off (number) 2 is 1
Having said that, I work for a large engineering consultancy and our guys obviously never heard of this grammatical usage as they all use "of"
You might think it's ridiculously stupid and not correct, but there's a whole industry out there that says you are wrong.I just realised how ridiculously stupid this thread is.
I do not understand where the word 'off' fits in with quantities. It's not correct.
The word 'of' means 'multiply'. When you have three apples, you say 'I have apples. 3 of them' because you have 3 x apple
A third of 3 is 1
I want six of those
We don't have many of them
Worked in engineering for 40 years,and its off.
You might think it's ridiculously stupid and not correct, but there's a whole industry out there that says you are wrong.
I am so confused right now.![]()