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Jana
Is "I ate a few slices of bread" correct? And what about "a loaf of bread"?
Is the loaf of bread the whole bread? And when you cut it, do you eat slices of bread or something else?
Nov 20, 2013 6:54 PM
Answers · 5
4
That's right. Because bread is uncountable, you use "loaf of bread" to describe a block of bread that hasn't been cut. A slice of bread is what you make by slicing the bread.
For example, I might make 16 slices of bread from a loaf of bread. A sandwich is made from two slices of bread.
November 20, 2013
1
The loaf of bread is the full portion of bread. When you cut the bread you making slices. The example you made about cutting the bread and the sandwich is correct.
November 20, 2013
Maybe you'd like to know the phrase, "The best thing since sliced bread" (Variant: "The greatest thing since sliced bread.") If something is the best thing since sliced bread, it means that it is excellent; wonderful." Examples: "In my opinion, the iphone is the best thing since sliced bread." (= In my opinion, the iphone is really an excellent product.)
November 21, 2013
yes, whole = loaf, cut pieces = slices
November 20, 2013
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Jana
Language Skills
Chinese (Other), Dutch, English, French, German, Hebrew
Learning Language
Chinese (Other), English, French, German, Hebrew
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