Search from various Engels teachers...
emar
lawn or grass
When talking about your house garden , should we call the grass lawn? When to use each'
I think there is another way to call it, could you let me know'
Thanks
17 mei 2016 12:54
Antwoorden · 7
First, the grammatical difference:
'Grass' is usually uncountable, whereas 'lawn' is countable. So, you might have grass in your garden (or some grass, or a lot of grass or a little grass). With 'lawn', you'd say that you have 'a lawn', or a large lawn, a small lawn, or several lawns if they're in different parts of a large garden.
Secondly, the meaning/reality:
'Grass' is a plant. It occurs naturally in all sorts of places. You get grass growing wild in the countryside, for example.
'A lawn' is a man-made garden feature. To have a lawn, you need to shape it, mow it and tend it.
All lawns are grass; not all grass is a lawn.
17 mei 2016
"Grass" is the actual plant while "a lawn" is the whole area where grass is growing. We use them largely interchangeably, though: "to mow the lawn," "to mow the grass," or "to mow the yard." (Brits might say "to mow the garden" but I don't know.) It only really matters if you're talking about a "species of grass" or something specific to the plant, or if you're talking about it in general: "This house has a beautiful lawn," "He works hard to maintain his lawn." Lawns are really important in America, I'm realizing.
Also "grass" is kind of old-fashioned slang for marijuana, so that's an important difference.
17 mei 2016
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
emar
Taalvaardigheden
Engels, Spaans
Taal die wordt geleerd
Engels
Artikelen die je misschien ook leuk vindt

🎃 October Traditions: Halloween, Holidays, and Learning Portuguese
14 likes · 0 Opmerkingen

The Curious World of Silent Letters in English
12 likes · 4 Opmerkingen

5 Polite Ways to Say “No” at Work
19 likes · 3 Opmerkingen
Meer artikelen