I always get these adjectives and determiners confused as regards their use and shades of meaning. Let's take a structure meaning “in the last few years”. Would it be right to use any of the following possibilities for conveying that meaning?
With LAST: In the/these LAST years.
With LATE: In the/these LATE years. Is this a synonym for the previous sentence or even correct? Does it convey the same meaning? What about LATER?
With LATTER: In the/these LATTER years. ¿?¿?
I hope someone can clarify this question to me, and forgive me if something about this is too obvious: I’m a Spanish speaker trying to figure out some nuances of grammar and meaning in English that are answered by consulting English or bilingual dictionaries, which have too many options, or by automatic machine translations, which erase all trace of fine nuance.
Did you notice, none of the examples you posted was a sentence?
– Robbie Goodwin Apr 04 '18 at 21:25I'm sorry someone changed your Question. Did you have an opportunity to mention that? Did anyone else have any means of knowing that?
Either way, if you’d provided examples of complete sentences, wouldn’t everyone be sure what you were talking about?
More…
– Robbie Goodwin Apr 07 '18 at 19:06It isn’t a complete part of anything useful, such as you might discuss “live” with a "real" person in any language.
It’s also not comparable to the original example, but it’s very hard to discuss any details in the format you chose, and would be much easier if you’d provided either a complete sentence, or your original research, let alone both.
– Robbie Goodwin Apr 07 '18 at 19:07