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Believer Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

Could they be these too?

Hi,

I was looking at your Writing World and Fizzi wrote the following sentence and want to ask you if the variable nouns (as they seem to me) that follow the quantifier 'some' can be in their individual, countable form? The tread's title is "Survey's Questionnaire."

4. Did the medical representative claim that the product was 'unique' or has some special merit, quality or property?

I think the word 'some' can be used for both of their uncountable and countable forms, but when you are writing in a general term geared for the general readers, is it a norm to resort to using their uncountable side?
  

Top answer

Merit, quality and property are countable here.

  • Merit, quality and property are countable here.
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1 Answers
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Merit, quality and property are countable here.

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