MinGeonKim
Are you in shower? Are you in the shower? I saw this expression Are you in the shower? in some book. My question is if I'm saying "Are you in shower?" Would that be "Are you in middle of shower?
15 feb. 2017 10:58
Antwoorden · 4
4
You can't say 'in shower'. This is an error or a typo - if anyone told you that you could miss out the 'the', they were giving you incorrect information. The only correct phrasing is 'I am in the shower'. We use the definite article, because it goes without saying that you are using the shower facilities that are available to you, in your home, a hotel or a gym, or anywhere else. There a few set phrases where the [preposition] + [place] construction is correct, and no article is used. For example : in town, in bed, at home, at work, at school. In British English we can also say 'in prison' and 'in hospital' for inmates and patients. But these are fixed expressions that are the exception to the rule, and they need to be learnt. In all other cases, you need to use an article before the noun.
15 februari 2017
2
- "Are you in the shower?" = correct - "Are you in shower?" = incorrect - "Are you in middle of shower?" = incorrect, should be "are you in the middle of a shower?", which given the context would be a fairly uncommon question as it's fairly obvious when someone is having a shower...
15 februari 2017
1
You could say: "Are you in the middle of a shower", or (more commonly), "are you having/taking a shower".
15 februari 2017
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