0
User_gary Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

[C] and [U]

0syndicate00 05002br
00noun (C)02br
00an organization that supplies articles and photographs to different newspapers and magazines for publishing02br
02br
00syndication00 05102br
00noun00 (U)02br
02br
00(from 05200)02br
02br
00What does (C) and (U) mean here?0240hrefhttp://dictionary.cambridge.org/define.asp?dict=CALD&key=80836&ph=oncShow phonetics241cShow phonetics242cCambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary
  

Top answer

0 Countable and uncountable? 0-

  • 0 Countable and uncountable?
  • 0-
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.

4 Answers
0
0 Countable and uncountable? 0-
0
0 01b01font00There should be a page in the dictionary that explains all that. tr = transitive verb; obs = obsolete, n= noun, etc. I'm not sure about C and U.02font02b00 0-
0
0C stands for countable and U stands for uncountable.At least, it is so in my dictionary. 050010id1
0
0 Yes, The Cambridge Dictionary uses C and U to indicate whether a noun is 'countable' or 'uncoutable'.0-

Related Questions