0
Khoshtip Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

as part of

Hello,

What is the meaning of as part of, in this sentence please?

We provide a minimum of operations as part of each class.

Is it as a part of? Or wouldn't it be more nice using of as a part of instead of as part of?
  

Top answer

khoshtip Is it as a part of? They carry the same meaning, yes. khoshtip Or wouldn't it be more nice using of as a part of instead of as part of?

  • khoshtip Is it as a part of?
  • They carry the same meaning, yes.
  • khoshtip Or wouldn't it be more nice using of as a part of instead of as part of?
  • Not particularly; the word can be countable or uncountable.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

6 Answers
0
khoshtipIs it as a part of?
They carry the same meaning, yes.
khoshtipOr wouldn't it be more nice using of as a part of instead of as part of?
Not particularly; the word can be countable or uncountable.
0
I didn't understand what relationship there is between being un/countable and that sentence!
0
khoshtip didn't understand what relationship there is between being un/countable and that sentence!
Why the exclamation mark, khoshtip? An uncountable noun needs no article.
0
OW. I think I got. You say since the part is not an countable noun so it's better to don't use the a for it, yeah?
0
khoshtip You say since the part is not an countable noun so it's better to don't use the a for it, yeah?
Nah. I said "the word can be countable or uncountable".
0
finally I couldn't understand. No problem. Thank you.

Related Questions