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Maria
When do we use the word (food) as a countable noun and when do we use it as uncountable ?
5 de jul. de 2019 20:03
Respuestas · 3
1
When you are talking about specific"types of food"
There are many foods which are rich in iron.
6 de julio de 2019
Food is uncountable when it is used as a general idea in the context of the sentence. For example:
"We can't live without food."
However, if you are talking about food as a collective noun (aka a collection of different foods), then it can be considered as a countable noun, and therefore would need to have its corresponding verb conjugated to match the number of the noun. For example:
"The food from the restaurant was excellent."
"There were rows of food on the table last night."
6 de julio de 2019
Do you mean the word "food" alone? The word "food" by itself (alone) is not a countable noun in American English if you mean that by adding an "s," it can be made plural and used in common parlance. The term "food groups" is the closest I can think of to make "food" plural, but "food groups" does not denote simple "food." Good luck.
5 de julio de 2019
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Maria
Competencias lingüísticas
Árabe, Inglés
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés
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