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I think most nouns are either countable or uncountable nouns with some nouns having both characteristics (if I am not mistaken).
and the words 'hymn" and "lament" seem to be countable nouns.
As I said, it's
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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mr wordy
292 days ago
Articles, Constructions, Nouns, Uncountable Nouns, Countable Nouns, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Songs, Structures, Languages, Music
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Normal 0 21 false false false MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 The main issues that the work is dealing with are countability and uncountable nouns in the English and Slovak languages. The work is a comparative analysis of these two morphological
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nellisha
349 days ago
Articles, Constructions, Nouns, Numbers, Uncountable Nouns, Countable Nouns, Translation, Writing, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Context, Students, Languages
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You can do that too, but it is not common, it's only used sometimes for emphasis. It's easy to build odd sentences that way, so I personally prefer to avoid using it that way, as a learner. When talking about one thing, using the article
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Hi,
I have difficulty clearly seeing the correctness of sentential constructions that have an uncountable noun with the verb 'have' before it.
I have happiness. -- This doesn't seem to be correctly written.
But, if we apply the same
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Do you mean quality as an uncountable noun vs quality as a countable noun?
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Ok, but it won't fix all the errors in this piece of writing.
The April's socio-economic growth has remained the same as that of the first 3 months. Industrial production had fairly high production and step by step resumed the previous growth
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Please read:
Government's April meeting: Announcing targets and capital for people to decide and supervise.
The April's socio-economic growth has remained the same as that of the first 3 months. Industrial production had fairly high
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I sent this a a message to Grammar Geek:
Thanks, but....I understand there is a "primary way"...Perhaps I'm not being clear. I'm not asking how this is most often said etc. etc...my interest is academic, viz., is it somehow acceptable to say
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Hi,
Can we employ that type of phrasal construction for both uncountable and countable nouns? I am guessing that not all countable and uncountable nouns can be the parties to this type of transformation. I think the word "kindness" is
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Hello Anon I'm a mere English learner from Japan and my role here is rather an asker than an answerer. But if you don't mind, I'd like you to read my ideas about your question.
I take "school" in "go to school" or "church" in "go to church" as
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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paco2004
4 yr 113 days ago
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