a. Unlike as in Boston, the marches in New York were not massive.
b. The storms didn't do much damage in Los Angeles, unlike as in San Diego.
Are the above sentences grammatically correct?
I can see the logic, but the 'unlike as in' sounds really strange to me.
Many thanks.
unlike as in
unlike as in
ACCESS_POST_ACTIONSRe: unlike as in
Native speakers would usually use the following versions:
Unlike [ in] Boston, the marches in New York were not massive.
The storms didn't do much damage in Los Angeles, unlike [ in] San Diego.
I prefer the version that includes the "in" because it is grammatically more coherent.
ACCESS_POST_ACTIONS
Unlike [ in] Boston, the marches in New York were not massive.
The storms didn't do much damage in Los Angeles, unlike [ in] San Diego.
I prefer the version that includes the "in" because it is grammatically more coherent.
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