Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
dolco
Why is a headache a countable noun only, when toothache can be both of uncountable and countable?
7 mars 2019 03:20
Réponses · 8
3
You are right about the countability.
But you are not right to expect any logic in English. Sometimes there is some, and sometimes there isn't. There are rarely reasons for it.
7 mars 2019
2
I'm a native English speaker with a B.A. in English and I don't know. I don't even know if you're question is correct or not. Perhaps if you give examples of sentences causing you confusion I could help.
7 mars 2019
@Anna Lemon-Gray Thank you :D
7 mars 2019
I don't know why, but my memory tells me it's a countable and sometimes logic says that it is not countable. What do I mean by non-countable? For example, the history of headache (not, headacheS) OR the glory of headache (not headacheS) or , "oh, the pain of headache for us, humans!".
7 mars 2019
@John Thank you so much!! :D:D
7 mars 2019
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dolco
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Coréen
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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