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What's the difference?
my boss is at home with a fever
my boss is at home with fever
Is the second one wrong?
I have to say "with A fever"?
Thank you
Oct 16, 2023 7:18 AM
Answers · 10
2
No real difference, but you would be more likely to say "...a fever".
(Just a thought...
A: My boss is at home with fever.
B: Oh really? Who's Fever?)
đ
October 16, 2023
1
The second one sounds more formal... Maybe even antiquated but both are correct
October 16, 2023
1
Both are correct. My internal parsing is that "fever" can be both an uncountable noun for "the state of having an elevated body temperature," and both a countable noun for "an episode of fever."
In your context, I think "a fever" is more natural, at least in US English.
I am having trouble coming up with any rules or explanations of when we use each form.
It seems to me that I would say "the symptoms of malaria are chills and fever," or that someone with a temperature 2° above normal "has two degrees of fever."
October 16, 2023
1
I agree with Charlie, there's no real difference.
Although I'd say.
The boss is at home and he has a fever.
October 16, 2023
OK! :-) Thank you!!!!
October 17, 2023
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English, Italian
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