student asking question

Does it change the nuance of the sentence if I use "the two dots" instead of "two of the dots"?

teacher

Native speaker’s answer

Rebecca

The connotation does change slightly, especially if you are hearing this sentence without context. "Two of the dots" indicates that they are only part (a number) of the whole, and not that there are only two dots total. "Two dots" can mean either two things: that there are only two dots, or that there are two dots out of a larger number of dots. Thus, we can consider the former expression to be more specific and provide more information to the listener. Ex: Three of the puppies are spotted. => specific Ex: Three puppies are spotted. => more ambiguous

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