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Júlia
What's the difference between "Candy" and "Sweet" ?
Oct 4, 2023 9:26 PM
Answers · 4
As nouns, there is little difference. "Candy" is more common in the U.S. but both are used. Note that they are handled differently:
Would you like some candy?
Would you like a piece of candy?
Would you like a sweet?
Would you like some sweets?
I don't want candy. (or "any candy")
I don't want sweets. (or "a sweet")
October 6, 2023
American English-candy British English-sweet
October 5, 2023
As Glenn says, 'candy' is a noun and 'sweet' is an adjective. However, in British English, 'sweet' can also be a noun. It is what some people call 'dessert' so, for example, apple pie and cream can be a sweet. We also call things like Haribo 'sweets'.
October 5, 2023
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Júlia
Language Skills
English, Portuguese
Learning Language
English
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