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| visits | member for | 1 year |
| seen | Jun 20 '12 at 5:26 | |
| stats | profile views | 2 |
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Jun 3 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Jun 3 |
accepted | Central determiners “some” and “any” used with singular count nouns |
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Jun 3 |
comment |
Central determiners “some” and “any” used with singular count nouns Can you provide any reference (web-articles, books) for the further examination ? |
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Jun 3 |
revised |
Central determiners “some” and “any” used with singular count nouns edited title |
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Jun 3 |
comment |
Central determiners “some” and “any” used with singular count nouns How does it satisfy the rule I mentioned in above. I mean "book" here is, obviously, not plural, not sure about noncount though. So do you mean it's a reclassification of singular into noncount ? If so, then for me, as a non-native speaker, it's really hard to imagine book as an undifferentiated mass. In case of the noncount "sugar" it's not sugar that can be viewed as countable but grains of it. I can't build the same logic for the noncount "book".I might've misunderstood you though. |
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Jun 3 |
awarded | Editor |
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Jun 3 |
revised |
Central determiners “some” and “any” used with singular count nouns added 204 characters in body |
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Jun 2 |
awarded | Student |
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Jun 2 |
asked | Central determiners “some” and “any” used with singular count nouns |