About the quite rude anon: I haven't seen the original post they're talking about but if it was about the sentence "than a van gogh's painting" then the reason it doesn't work is because it has both "a" in it and "gogh's". Correct sentences would be "than a van gogh painting" or "than van gogh's paintings" (as long as they fit within the context) otherwise it makes it seem like van gogh is an object instead of a person. Basically, you can say "than a tree's leaves" because the tree isn't
[part two of message] a person. To summarize: English is a weird language and I hope the explanation made some kind of sense?
ooooh, alright I got this now !! Thank you so much for taking the time to explain it, I literally had never heard about this rule before ?? It does makes sense tho I get it now, they just didn’t explain why it was wrong and I ?? was so confused omg, I’m going to change that caption rn thank u v much !!