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Chalk slide 554 Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Candy vs candies

I would like to be helped about a correction made by a teacher regarding the use of the word candies. I was giving an example, she shouldn't eat candies and he corrected me saying that in American English candies wasn't the plural of candy and that in British English the word was sweets therefore the right sentence according to him was she shouldn't eat candy ( the picture showed different wrapped candies), was he right in his correction?

  

Top answer

chalk slide 554 was he right in his correction? Yes. 'candy' is generally treated as uncountable, so 'candy' would be better in that sentence.

  • chalk slide 554 was he right in his correction?
  • Yes.
  • 'candy' is generally treated as uncountable, so 'candy' would be better in that sentence.
  • She shouldn't eat any candy, whether it's (smaller) pieces of candy or candy in other forms, like chocolate bars or peppermint sticks.
  • chalk slide 554 the picture showed different wrapped candies While this is not wrong, we usually say 'candy' when describing the whole class of food.
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1 Answers
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chalk slide 554was he right in his correction?

Yes. 'candy' is generally treated as uncountable, so 'candy' would be better in that sentence. She shouldn't eat any candy, whether it's (smaller) pieces of candy or candy in other forms, like chocolate bars or peppermint sticks.

chalk slide 554the picture showed different wrapped

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