: This specific string often appears in automated OCR scans of student workbooks or teacher's manuals where "1—1" refers to Exercise 1, Question 1 . If this is from a test, "good paper" might be the intended answer to describe what someone has or is using.
The correct answer option depends on the specific grammatical task, but based on common English language exercises found in textbooks like by Carol Skinner, this typically refers to a "Correct the Sentence" or "Multiple Choice" task. Friends: 1Г—1
✅ : "Friends are good." or "My friends have good paper." : This specific string often appears in automated
❌ "Friends: 1—1 — good paper" is likely a fragmented note or a typo from a workbook answer key. Explanations ✅ : "Friends are good
: If this is a grade or a "score" (1 out of 1), it indicates that the student correctly identified a property of an object (e.g., "The friends used good paper for their project").
: In English learning materials such as Friends 1 (Global Students' Book) , exercises often focus on basic sentence structure (Subject + Verb + Object). The phrase "Friends... good paper" lacks a linking verb or a possessive verb to make it a complete thought.