> It is not grammatical. "Three times <what> older than his son"?
> You can be "5 years older than his son", but "three times" is not some
> quantity, it is simply incomplete.
If you have a number X, 3 times that number is 3x.
It is not incomplete, depends on another variable.
>The only thing it could mean, if it meant anything, is that the son is y
>years old, and the father is "3 times y" years older, making him y + 3 y =
>4 y years old.
If he soon is represented by the variable Y, "times older than his son" means 3Y, not 3+Y
> It is not grammatical. "Three times <what> older than his son"?
> You can be "5 years older than his son", but "three times" is not some
> quantity, it is simply incomplete.
If you have a number X, 3 times that number is 3x.
It is not incomplete, depends on another variable.
>The only thing it could mean, if it meant anything, is that the son is y
>years old, and the father is "3 times y" years older, making him y + 3 y =
>4 y years old.
If he soon is represented by the variable Y, "times older than his son" means 3Y, not 3+Y
Regards,
Jordi,