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Difference between "sold" and "sold out"



 
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Homework vs. assignment | Expression: Mix the right balance of sauces
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Difference between "sold" and "sold out" Thu Nov 04, 2004 8:26 am  Difference between "sold" and "sold out"
 

Test No. incompl/inter-13 "At the Theatre", question 10

As always his latest play has been a huge success and all the tickets are ......... until August.

(a) taken out
(b) put out
(c) sold out
(d) bought out

Test No. incompl/inter-13 "At the Theatre", answer 10

As always his latest play has been a huge success and all the tickets are sold out until August.

Correct answer: (c) sold out

Your answer was: n/a
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What the difference between sold and sold out?

thanks
Sergey
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Sold Thu Nov 04, 2004 21:45 pm  Sold
 

Sold means thet have been bought - sold out means they have been bought totally and there is no ticket available.
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Difference between "sold" and "sold out" Wed Dec 20, 2006 6:19 am  Difference between "sold" and "sold out"
 

Quote:
As always his latest play has been a huge success and all the tickets are sold out until August.

Hi,

I'd like to make sure of two things I am not yet very clear about for the sentence.

1. Since the sentence uses present tense does it suggest it happens every year or could be just once?
2. It's hard for me to understand 'all the tickets are sold out until August'. If so it implys that some other tickets will be available after August, which contradicts the word 'all'.

haihao
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Difference between "sold" and "sold out" Wed Dec 20, 2006 7:17 am  Difference between "sold" and "sold out"
 

.
1-- Just this year. Be in simple present tense is now: I am tired.

2-- No contradiction: all of the tickets available from now until August are sold out. August tickets are available. All does not require universal application: All the people in this room are gay does not mean that all people everywhere are gay.
.
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Difference between "sold" and "sold out" Wed Dec 20, 2006 8:05 am  Difference between "sold" and "sold out"
 

Thank you very much, Mister Micawber. Now nothing is unclear with it.

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Homework vs. assignment | Expression: Mix the right balance of sauces
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