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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

generic use

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But after all it is the leaders of "a" country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy or fascist dictatorship, or a parliament or a communist dictatorship.
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"a"above the sentence was used to denote a class or group of things; not specific? If that is the case, could I change "a country" into "the country" or "countries"?
  

Top answer

Anonymous "a"above the sentence was used to denote a class or group of things No, just any of the group. Anonymous not specific? Right.

  • Anonymous "a"above the sentence was used to denote a class or group of things No, just any of the group.
  • Anonymous not specific?
  • Right.
  • Any one country.
  • Anonymous If that is the case, could I change "a country" into "the country" It sounds very odd without predetermination of which country.
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1 Answers
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Anonymous"a"above the sentence was used to denote a class or group of things
No, just any of the group.
Anonymous not specific?
Right. Any one country.
AnonymousIf that is the case, could I change "a country" into "the country"
It sounds very odd without predetermination of which country.

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