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Hi. When do we use the indefinite article "an" before the word "extraordinary"? In a religious context, what could be the deciding factor for using the phrase "possess extraordinary power" versus using the phrase
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
42 days ago
Articles, Vocabulary, Nouns, Uncountable Nouns, Idioms, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Indefinite, Context, Languages
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Hi, why do the following titles contain the definite article and not the indefinite article: Gunship: The Helicopter Simulation (name of a computer game) Bridge: The English Magazine for Students (name of a magazine) The above are real life examples.
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Hi, why do the following titles contain the definite article and not the indefinite article: Gunship: The Helicopter Simulation (name of a computer game) Bridge: The English Magazine for Students (name of a magazine) The above are real life
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Hi again,
English grammar books published in Japan explains: "This is the doll that he made yesterday," suggests that he made only one doll yesterday. Yes.
It also suggests that the listener is already aware that a doll was made.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
clive
107 days ago
Articles, Grammar, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Indefinite, Context, Usages, France, Asia, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Languages
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Thanks. English grammar books published in Japan explains: "This is the doll that he made yesterday," suggests that he made only one doll yesterday. "This is a doll that he made yesterday," suggests that he made more than one
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
snappy
107 days ago
Articles, Grammar, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Indefinite, Usages, Asia, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Languages
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Yes, it's correct. We use such as an adverb intensifier. It gives emphasis to an adjective.
As an adverb, "such" can precede an adjective. It can also precede "a" or "an" - indefinite articles - and an
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The noun "dream" is countable.
We can consider that "imagination" is either uncountable or countable , See the definition at Cambridge Dictionaries Online: imagination .
Here's an example to show how
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There may be situations in which the plural s is needed but English would probably manage without it quite well. In Swedish, another Germanic language, nouns have five or six declensions. In one of them nouns have the same indefinite singular and
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The indefinnite article and numbers are not used with non-countable nouns, such as advice. So, he has a good knowledge of English is wrong? CB
ESL Basic English Grammar Questions and Help
by
cool breeze
137 days ago
Nouns, Countable Nouns, Articles, Singular Nouns, Writing, United Kingdom, Countries, Great Britain, Languages, Singular, Indefinite, Numbers
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So, when talking about modelling hydrodynamics, we would use "a hydrodynamic model"? Yes. our answer has lead me to another question: is it "...indefinite articles which should...", or "...indefinite articles that
ESL, Learn Basic English Vocabulary
by
fandorin
140 days ago
Articles, Clauses, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, Friendships, Writing, Colours, Usages, Speaking, Chat, Languages, Indefinite
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