Hi, let's say i work on monday, tuesday and wednesday in a city, and on thursday and friday in b city. Do you want the amount written in words as in for a cheque? The word strings only few and only little can indeed be grammatically correct, as they are here:
(a) the band is ready to start, only few people have arrived. In general, 'unique' is not only 'only one' but also has connotations of being special, 'only' is purely factual and can be used in most cases and 'sole' is fairly formal or legalistic. A) i only would like to say you that i miss you b) i would only like to say you that i.
Sólo me gustaría decirte que te echo de menos but i'm not sure about which one of these two sentences is more proper: Here only few is correct. Discussions in english about the english language. Writing the currency first is probably considered old fashioned now, but is not impossible.
This is not a translation forum. Somehow the first sounds more natural to me, though i know only. In the sentence i just wrote, 'only' referred to 'the phrase before it', but i. I only work on thursday and friday in b city.
Sentence 2 is not impossible, but i agree with the newt: (oxford university) providing assistance for mathematics students on a needs basis (academic paper) we take your privacy very seriously, so only secured administrative staff will be allowed access to your account on a 'needs' basis. 'thirteen thousand, five hundred and eight us. Can you please explain why?
We only had a little pie left in the fridge. = all we had left was a little pie; We had nothing else left. we had only a little pie left in the fridge. = we had only a little pie, but we might also have had some other products. You are the only woman i ever loved and you are unique. Perhaps these examples will help:
The criteria are the proven needs of the applicant and their academic calibre and all grants are offered on a needs basis. I'm trying to say in english the following sentence: 'only' can appear in various positions, and often appears earlier than its 'logical' position (it's not next to what it actually talks about). 'only' can be used in a wide variety of positions, and doesn't always qualify the word/phrase it's next to.