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"infact we may lose completly concsious memory" shouldnt it be "complete" ???

2006-08-01 04:51:55 · 25 answers · asked by whatevar 2 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

25 answers

Completely is correct, as it is an adjective for the word conscious. Unless "complete conscious" is one thing, stand alone, capable of being lost, then the adjective "completely" describes the intended suggestion that the conscious memory may only partially be lost.

2006-08-01 05:21:19 · answer #1 · answered by Love2Sew 5 · 5 2

both of the below would sound correct to me

1. infact, we may lose completly-concsious memory.

2. infact we may lose (the) completly concsious memory

2006-08-01 05:34:24 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would say "in fact we may lose complete concsious memory"

2006-08-01 04:56:07 · answer #3 · answered by vampire angel 3 · 0 0

completely is correct also. if you change it to complete you are making it modify conscious memory and the person is not necessarily talking about something called "complete conscious memory." they are talking about losing "conscious memory" completely. If you change the sentence around to "in fact we may completely lose conscious memory" or "in fact we my lose conscious memory completely" it makes more sense but it is correct the first way too.

2006-08-01 04:59:33 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

In fact we may lose completely conscious memory.

That would mean totally losing only memory that is completely conscious - not all of it.

In fact we may lose complete conscious memory.

That would mean totally losing all conscious memory.

2006-08-01 04:58:53 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It could be correct if they are saying the memory is "completely conscious" but i think complete is probably what you're after. Oh, and your question should be

"Is this sentence correct?"

2006-08-01 04:57:13 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think the following sounds better:

"In fact, we may completely lose conscious memory..."

2006-08-01 04:56:01 · answer #7 · answered by thatsie 2 · 0 0

I think it should be "In fact, we may completely lose conscious memory." It is correct as is (with typos corrected) but awkward in conversational English.

2006-08-01 04:55:09 · answer #8 · answered by Sappho 4 · 0 0

Or maybe, " In fact we may completetly lose conscious memory." But I would say that you are right and it should read " In fact, we may lose complete conscious memory."

2006-08-01 04:58:21 · answer #9 · answered by justswimmin 4 · 0 0

(Is this sentence CORRECT.)


"In fact(two words), (COMMA) we may lose complete conscious memory."

The way it is, though, would make more sense (to me) if it were worded:

"In fact, we may completely lose conscious memory."

But I don't know if that means the same thing you're trying to say.

2006-08-01 04:57:09 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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