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give a book to A and B



 
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give a book to A and B #1 (permalink) Wed Jan 04, 2012 3:04 am   give a book to A and B
 

Hi,

I have a question on "Mr. Lee gave a book to Mr. Kim and Ms. Roberts."

I think it means "Mr. Lee gave a book to them(Mr. Kim and Ms. Roberts)": The number of books Mr. Lee gave is one.
However, can it mean "Mr. Lee gave a book to Mr. Kim and Ms. Roberts, respectively."? Then it means Mr. Lee gave two books after all. What do you think?

Also, similar question:
"Mr. Lee gave books to Mr. Kim and Ms. Roberts."

It could be understood in both ways, too.
1) Mr. Lee gave books to them(Mr. Kim and Ms. Roberts).
2) Mr. Lee gave books to Mr. Kim and Ms. Roberts, respectively.
Which one is right?

Of course, we should think about the context, but I'd like to know the meaning of the sentences when you see them at first sight- without context.

Thanks a lot in advance,
sweetpumpkin
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give a book to A and B #2 (permalink) Wed Jan 04, 2012 8:03 am   give a book to A and B
 

Without context, it is not clear in your first example whether they were given a book each or a book between them. (Given the absence of context most people would assume that they had a book each, rather than one between them).

In your second example using the plural, it is unclear how many books were given to each person -- at least one each, but possibly more.
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give a book to A and B #3 (permalink) Wed Jan 04, 2012 18:32 pm   give a book to A and B
 

Can't do anything here without context. Native English speakers would be confused here as well.
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