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Victorycountry Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

It's a fantastic feeling, words can't describe what I felt

0 Hi, 02br
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00I am starting to understand the "an indefinite article+adjective + uncountable noun". 02br
00(hopefully) 02br
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00In "It's a fantastic feeling, words can't describe what I felt", "a fantastic feeling" is a countable noun. As far as I know, feeling can be an uncountable noun. 02br
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00As far as I understand, "a fantastic feeling" specifies one certain feeling (but not a particular one) at one certain time (probably now). 02br
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00So I am wondering what kind of "countable images" I should think in order to distingush "a fantastic feeling" from uncountable qualities. 02br
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00Thanks in advance. 0-
  

Top answer

0Think of each time you get one of these fantastic feelings. Each occurrence of such an experience (like falling in love or seeing a Great Master or watching The Sound of Music) is accompanied by an excitement inside your chest, a difficulty in breathing perhaps, a sensation of floating? 02br 02br 00I would think that 'feeling' is more often countable than uncountable, actually.

  • 0Think of each time you get one of these fantastic feelings.
  • Each occurrence of such an experience (like falling in love or seeing a Great Master or watching The Sound of Music) is accompanied by an excitement inside your chest, a difficulty in breathing perhaps, a sensation of floating?
  • 02br 02br 00I would think that 'feeling' is more often countable than uncountable, actually.
  • 02br 02br 00I have a bad feeling about this blind date.
  • 02br 00It's a great feeling to finish work on Friday night.
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1 Answers
0
0Think of each time you get one of these fantastic feelings. Each occurrence of such an experience (like falling in love or seeing a Great Master or watching The Sound of Music) is accompanied by an excitement inside your chest, a difficulty in breathing perhaps, a sensation of floating? 02br
02br
00I would think that 'feeling' is more often countable than uncountable, actua

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