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Asked on March 11, 2021 in Meaning.
Do you have a negative comment
about Distractedly?
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Asked on February 27, 2021 in Grammar.
When you are referring to a specific item or specific items, you use the “the”,
like I have the steak.
I
have the steaks or I have the cheese.
When you refer a “nonspecific” product, you use “a” for the singular, like I have
a steak.
When leaving out “A”, if it were me you would
get “Being on Taco Bell.”
How many steaks to eat? How many meats? What’s the difference between a steak and a ham? Why do I love steak? How big is a steak? If you don’t indicate anything about whether there are discrete items, “steak” in this example becomes a non-counted entity, because it is “steak” in this example. In
I have a steak.
What is the collection of discrete items? When you say
I have steaks, what are the reasons?
if you are talking to discrete items it is clear that you are referring to discrete items. If steaks is plural, you have to be able to count them and therefore have to have multiple discrete items. The article isn’t necessary. I are a fisherman.
But I can say, I have a steak.
On Wikipedia, it is written that “Let the English and/or a/an/ and (in some contexts) some.’ The authors of this article give one example of this.” The article isn’t needed to show that you’re talking about discrete items or specific items. In the case of talking about “indefinite objects”, use ”s”, “”, “””
and “‘. “. ” As you said, “/’Indefinite object’. For instance, “indefinite object is 1 piece of 3 pieces whose value equals 1″” (in terms of order)” (emphasis added)
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