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In any the case
I have a new English teacher and she tends to say "in any the case" whenever I would simply say "in any case".
For example, she says: "In any the case, you can write an example and that will clarify what you mean." I would say "In any case, you can write an example..." I had never heard this construction before, and I would like to know your opinion: Is this a regional expression, is it ever used somewhere, and how, or is it just a wrong construction? (...Or are we both wrong?) If this is a valid expression, can anyone explain to me how this "the" is working? Thanks in advance for all help provided.
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