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Hi,
1. How about "Monday is the day of weeks between Sunday and Tuesday"
'day of weeks' is incorrect. It makes your meanung extremely unclear.
It sounds like you mean
(Monday is the day of ) (weeks between Sunday and
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I know some nouns can be either countable or uncountable. when I look for something in my dictionaries, I can notice a subtle difference between nouns. Some nouns have their definitions starting with " " In OALD7, and other nouns have
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Is many details correct?
Yes, a detail is a countable noun, so "many details" is correct.
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Calif,
You said that the choice between
ANY + plural countablenoun or
ANY + singular countable noun
depends on context. I hope you could explain more.
I have two examples to start with. The teacher explains a lesson and then
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Hi, what is it that you are having trouble with? Articles? Would you say "I want banana" or "I want a banana"? You need to understand how to use articles, and to understand that, you need to know the difference between
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Oxford says: respect 3 a particular aspect or detail of sth: In this respect we are very fortunate. Ç There was one respect, however, in which they differed. aspect a particular part or feature of a situation, an idea, a problem, etc.; a way in
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Here is my 2nd draft. Topic: How movies or television influence people's behavior? Use reason and specific examples to support your answer. What type of media has the greatest influence on people's behavior? Surely, the only answer would be
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Hi,
First, stuff is uncountable noun, while
thing is a countable noun.
We use stuff to intrinsically talk about unidentified mass of thing(s) /
substances / materials.
We use thing to extrinsically address items we can discreetly
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Hoa Thai wrote: First, thank you for your reply. Now if you can help me a bit further, I would appreciate very much. If advice is an uncountable abstract noun, then advices must be wrong, right? ( Yesterday, my father gave me his advice. Today,
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Amazighman wrote:
many Thanks for these information
As MrP says, it should be this information. ("Information" is an uncountable noun.)
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