Asked by rfvv
1. Here is a fresh salad.
2. Here is fresh salad.
(Are both grammatical? Which expression is frequently used? Notice the sue of 'article,' please.)
3. Here is a cold strawberry juice.
4. Here is cold strawberry juice.
(Are both grammatical? Which expression is frequently used? Notice the use of 'article,' please.)
2. Here is fresh salad.
(Are both grammatical? Which expression is frequently used? Notice the sue of 'article,' please.)
3. Here is a cold strawberry juice.
4. Here is cold strawberry juice.
(Are both grammatical? Which expression is frequently used? Notice the use of 'article,' please.)
Answers
Answered by
Writeacher
1 and 2 are both grammatically correct. 1 means one serving of fresh salad. 2 means a whole bowl of it from which each person can dish out his/her own.
3 is not quite correct. 4 is correct.
http://www.google.com/search?aq=f&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=indigenous+cultures+religions
The word "juice" is a non-count noun.
3 is not quite correct. 4 is correct.
http://www.google.com/search?aq=f&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=indigenous+cultures+religions
The word "juice" is a non-count noun.
Answered by
Writeacher
PS -- If you want to refer to one serving of juice, then you need to say this: "Here is a glass of cold strawberry juice."
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