@[email protected] to ShowerthoughtsEnglish • 8 months ago"One of a kind" means unique, but "two of a kind" implies quite commonmessage-square5fedilinkarrow-up124arrow-down130
arrow-up1-6arrow-down1message-square"One of a kind" means unique, but "two of a kind" implies quite common@[email protected] to ShowerthoughtsEnglish • 8 months agomessage-square5fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]OPlinkfedilinkEnglish-8•edit-28 months agoYes, and such pairings occur way more frequently than “one of a kind”.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish22•edit-28 months agoThe saying “two of a kind” is saying that the similarity of the pairing pairings are uncommon enough to stand out from a random pairing. But at the core it is a comparison of similarities, not about frequency. One of a kind just means there isn’t anything similar.
Yes, and such pairings occur way more frequently than “one of a kind”.
The saying “two of a kind” is saying that the similarity of the pairing pairings are uncommon enough to stand out from a random pairing.
But at the core it is a comparison of similarities, not about frequency. One of a kind just means there isn’t anything similar.