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D vs There was a earthquake in California.

The two phrases are not comparable as they serve different purposes. "d" is not a complete sentence or a common English expression, while "there was a earthquake in California" is a complete sentence describing an event. The first phrase seems to be a typo or an incomplete word, while the second phrase is a statement about a specific incident.

Last updated: March 15, 2024 • 531 views

D

This is not a complete sentence or a common English expression.

This seems to be a typo or an incomplete word, as it does not convey a clear meaning on its own.

There was a earthquake in California.

This is a correct sentence that describes an event.

This phrase is used to report or inform about a past event, in this case, an earthquake in California.

Examples:

  • There was an earthquake in California yesterday.
  • There was a major earthquake in California last week.
  • Jan 16, 2015 ... I had a dream years ago there was a earthquake in California so bad it fell off literally and a tsunami sling shot and hit the east coast took half of ...
  • Oct 30, 2007 ... (theamericanxp): I think there was a earthquake in california. Many twitters coming through (Tracy27): Ooh, earthquake! (rnewman): that was a ...

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