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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

the

The...11.enough: he saved untill he had 'the' money for a new car. She didn't have 'the' courage to leave. ? The Random House Dictionary of The English Language

I have a question. 'The' means 'enough' in the two sentences according to the the dictionary, is it also grammatical to delete 'the' in the sentences : <He saved untill he had 'money' for a new car> <She didn't have 'courage' to leave> (no determinative because of 'money', 'courage' being used as uncountable)
  

Top answer

Anonymous 'The' means 'enough' in the two sentences according to the the dictionary, Yes, that is the intent. Anonymous is it also grammatical to delete 'the' in the sentences : (no determinative because of 'money', 'courage' being used as uncountable) Yes, you could do that.

  • Anonymous 'The' means 'enough' in the two sentences according to the the dictionary, Yes, that is the intent.
  • Anonymous is it also grammatical to delete 'the' in the sentences : (no determinative because of 'money', 'courage' being used as uncountable) Yes, you could do that.
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1 Answers
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Anonymous 'The' means 'enough' in the two sentences according to the the dictionary,
Yes, that is the intent.
Anonymousis it also grammatical to delete 'the' in the sentences : (no determinative because of 'money', 'courage' being used as uncountable)
Yes, you could do that.

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