We have partnered with TradePub to bring you free industry magazines and resources - no coupons or credit cards required!
Visit: englishforums.tradepub.com
-
Hi, I think it is a common knowledge that some uncountable nouns can be changed to countable nouns (are susceptable to such transformations) if they are made into types. Does that mean if we could place the phrase "a type" and "a
-
Thank you so much, but I asked the question because I believe I asked a similar question in the past and a guru have answered it that the indefinite article does go with a phrase similar to 'other activity' in the original example
-
However, what you have made a mistake with in my humble opinion is that the indefinite article isn't used with uncountable nouns. The defintite article (the) can be used with all nouns. Yes, yes, yes. I know that. Maybe I used the wrong words
-
I welcome your further comments. I don't get e-mail notifications from most of my posts on this forum but I saw your response as I was browsing what is going on at the moment. Please forgive me if I don't always respond to your
-
Madhulk, I think you are right. Washroom is an uncountable noun, therefore indefinite articles a or an cannot modify it. Of course, Jack would not go to his neighbour's home to use his washroom. So, the definite article the would be used to
-
Let me rephrase it again, even indefinite article the is used with countable nouns or the nouns which are acting as counting nouns .
What's "indefinite article the"?
So it means if some non-countable noun is acting as a
-
Ant, you mean that even article the is used with countable nouns or the nouns which are acting as countable nouns. Yes, but it can be used with uncountable nouns as well. Countable (along the lines of GG's example): " The happiness that
-
Thank you, Avangi.
In my previous post, I should have used third-person verb tenses, 'sounds' and 'gives' -- proper subject-verb agreement wasn't made due to my carelessness.
Going back to your request for examples of
-
Hi,
It has been known to me that a gerund can function as a noun and should or likely to be treated more as an uncountable noun than a countable noun.
Mixing of sugar and flour makes this dough ...
If you want to be specific, I think you
-
Hi there,
I am from an asian country (korea) and Korean doesn't distinguish countable or uncountable nouns so I have some problem with this concept even though I have been living in english speaking country for 10 years.
Now the word
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|