Math, asked by sekhar3835, 6 months ago

What ll be the result?

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Answered by gunduravimudhiraj76
0

Answer:

result or here are the results?

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Both are correct, and you use one or the other depending on the number of results you are referring to.

One result: “Here is the result.”

Two or more results: “Here are the results.”

There are cases where several results could be thought of as one big result, in which case you can go with whichever version you like, or whichever is closer in meaning to what you specifically refer to.

“Here is the result of your blood tests” - for example if you refer to the paper you’re handing the person as you say that, or if the blood tests were done looking for one particular issue.

“Here are the results of your blood tests” - for example when you refer to a collection of blood tests, each with individual results. I’d personally go with this one, because as long as you have more than one blood test, the results will likely also be more than one.

But just focus on the one/many distinction and you’re good to go.

Edit: The question details appeared after I had answered, but for the example given there it could be one or the other, depending on what the coworker gave the client. Did he or she give the client a list of results (for example various observations based on the logs), or just one result (such as a conclusion derived from those logs)? Figure that out, and then you’ll know which is correct.

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U could say accordingly, most say w that in mind. I might add that u say what I think is…or if u have anything, like here's what I was able…perhaps this will make u…or anything! Key is the lil fuller words and the awkward AWKWARD pause which u may forget w ALSO v strong body language maybe respect.pst but also a few v powerful language. That is key but I will know as u go. Something like that is strong like u will know as u go like as u see this (the/my Results) U WILL SEE and OR know. Never say THIS TO BE TRUE, let them make their inferences and say THAT to them ‘u can make ur inference(s) ba

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Before you read this (tl;dr), know that the correct choice has to do with context. You very well may have chosen the correct reply. The purpose of my reply to this A2A is to show you how to chose the correct response in the future.

I would assume (given this small amount of information about the conversation and situation) that the coworker would say “here are the results,” (because English-speakers tend to connect the “logs” from the first part of the sentence to the second part, although it is wrong to do so).

The correct choice really depends on whether the information shows a single outcome

If I am presenting the SINGLE result of a single test, then I would say ‘here is the result of your mammogram’.

If I am presenting the several different figures of a blood draw, for instance, then I would say ‘here are the results of your CBC’.

A single result (the result) is one ‘thing’, one ‘answer’ to a question. Some kinds of tests or questions lead to multiple results, others don’t.

So it depends. Both are correct, but they don’t refer to the same things.

‘The result’ is like a yes or no answer. There is ONE result. ‘The result of the duel was…’ is singular. Only one person can ‘win’.

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