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Megumi@Ibaraki
How is the word "massacre" used as an uncountable noun? Could you explain it in comparison with the word used as a countable noun? Thanks!
Jul 9, 2011 3:13 AM
Answers · 2
It's a countable noun only.
July 9, 2011
elanvital, Noncountable: I wrote a paper about massacre as a tactic in war. Countable: Bodies were lying everywhere after the poisoning. It was a massacre and the third massacre of innocent animals in Texas this year. Many nouns can be uncountable when they define activities but are countable when they refer to a category or unit. Noncountable activities. I ate breakfast. I went to school It was war. Countable categories: I want a breakfast like no breakfast I have ever tasted before. I went to a school that had no teachers, only students! No one wants a war with the Martians.
July 9, 2011
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