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rather #1 (permalink) Sun Nov 20, 2011 5:13 am   rather
 

1. The students who neglected to prepare for monthly test hide in the cafeteria
rather than risk their teacher's wrath.
2. The students who neglected to prepare for monthly test hide in the cafeteria
rather risk their teacher's wrath.
Which one of the above sentences is meaningful and grammatical?
If both are wrong, please correct.
Allifathima
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rather #2 (permalink) Sun Nov 20, 2011 12:26 pm   rather
 

1. is the better sentence but needs a small correction:

The students who neglected to prepare for the/their monthly test hide in the cafeteria rather than risk their teacher's wrath.
This is if the action of hiding occurs in the present.
If it occured in the past, then the sentence should be:
The students who neglected to prepare for the/their monthly test hid in the cafeteria rather than risked their teacher's wrath.
or, depending on he time scales involved:
The students who had neglected to prepare for the/their monthly test had hidden in the cafeteria rather than risked their teacher's wrath.
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rather #3 (permalink) Sun Nov 20, 2011 13:02 pm   rather
 

What does 'rather than' mean in this sentence?
Allifathima
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rather #4 (permalink) Sun Nov 20, 2011 14:28 pm   rather
 

It means they would prefer to hide than to face their teacher.

Scroll down to the 'Idioms' section here:
http://oald8.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/dictionary/rather+than#rather_1
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