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Alc24 Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Is CHOICE countable or uncountable

There isn't a lot of choice.
There aren't a lot of choices.

Here is says its both countable and uncountable
I don't what the difference is

http://www.macmillandictionary.com/dictionary/british/choice

Thank you
  

Top answer

The first is uncountable: 'choice' is a kind of process. The second is countable: 'choices' is several instances of using the process.

  • The first is uncountable: 'choice' is a kind of process.
  • The second is countable: 'choices' is several instances of using the process.
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2 Answers
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The first is uncountable: 'choice' is a kind of process.
The second is countable: 'choices' is several instances of using the process.
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alc24Here is says its both countable and uncountable
I don't what the difference is
Here it says it's both countable and uncountable. (period)

I don't know/understand what the difference is. (period)
I don't understand the difference.

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