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Believer Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

question deux on variable noun

Can anyone help me to understand how a person would be able to know when to use one version and not the other if he/she has not spend many, many hours looking over the two versions, countable and uncountable, of the word to acquire a keen sense of awareness in terms of their functionality? Is the only way to gain proficiency in this area of the English language is to develop a feeling for this type of words over a long period of time? The two definitions look amazingly similar.

The word is "feeling"

According to the Collins/Cobuild Advanced Learner's English Dictionary, a feeling, a countable noun, is an emotion, such as anger or happiness.

Feeling, an uncountable noun, is a way of thinking and reacting to things which is emotional and not planned rather than logical and practical. He was prompted to a rare outburst of feeling ... a voice that trembles with feeling.
  

Top answer

Hey Believer... Would you be french by any chance ? 'Cuz I don't see it any different than what you'd be faced with in french with the word 'émotion' : COUNTABLE : Il était prompt a laisser paraitre ses émotions.

  • Hey Believer...
  • Would you be french by any chance ?
  • 'Cuz I don't see it any different than what you'd be faced with in french with the word 'émotion' : COUNTABLE : Il était prompt a laisser paraitre ses émotions.
  • UNCOUNTABLE : Il a répondu avec de l 'émotion dans la voix.
  • Hope this helps ?
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4 Answers
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Hey Believer...

Would you be french by any chance ? 'Cuz I don't see it any different than what you'd be faced with in french with the word 'émotion' :
COUNTABLE : Il était prompt a laisser paraitre ses émotions.
UNCOUNTABLE : Il a répondu avec de l'émotion dans la voix.
Hope this helps ?
Waïti.
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Thank you.

I am not French and it is hard to understand French. Is there anyway you can explain to me in English?
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Sorry... I presumed you'd be french because of the title of your thread.
I wasn't really explaining the grammar point you've raised, just illustrating it with the same example in french.
I'm far from being a grammar guru and would be unable to explain this properly
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Is the only way to gain proficiency in this area of the English language is to develop a feeling for this type these types of words over a long period of time?

Yes and no. Yes, eventually proficiency is developed by working with the language for a long time. But it may not take as long as you think. It depends on the person.

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