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Vincent Teo Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

has sandwiches

0Can I say,02br
02br
00(A) He has sandwiches for lunch. 0-
  

Top answer

0 Yes 0-

  • 0 Yes 0-
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11 Answers
0
0If I say,02br
02br
00(a) He eats a piece / loaf of sandwiches. 0-
0
0 A sandwich is two pieces of bread with a filling between them. 02br
02br
00He could eat a piece of a sandwich.02br
02br
00He would probably be ill if he ate a loaf of sandwiches - a loaf is the term of a large baked piece of dough, from which pieces are cut for use.0-
0
0If by 'piece of sandwich' you mean a whole sandwich, no. It is a count noun. He can eat a sandwich, some sandwiches, three sandwiches, whatever. It is not like cake, where you get pieces or portions. Each section is considered a whole sandwich. Take one big sandwich, cut it in half, and what you now have is two sandwiches.02br
02br
00If by 'piece of sandwich' you mean only a
0
0If I say,02br
02br
00(A) He eats sandwiches with some milk as breakfast. 0-
0
0Yes, that is correct.02br
02br
00Your question 'If I say?' is not complete.02br
02br
00If I say this, will it be correct?02br
02br
00or just02br
02br
00Can I say?0-
0
0<already answered>0-
0
0Can I say,02br
02br
00(a) He likes to eat sandwiches and milk every afternoon. 0-
0
0 No, because you don't eat milk. 0-
0
0(a) He likes to eat sandwiches and drink milk every afternoon. 02br
02br
00is that correct? 0-

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