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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Vocabulary

To date

We haven't had a reply to date.

Is "date" an uncountable noun in the sentence above?
  

Top answer

"to date" is such an idiomatic expression that I'm not sure the question is really applicable.

  • "to date" is such an idiomatic expression that I'm not sure the question is really applicable.
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7 Answers
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"to date" is such an idiomatic expression that I'm not sure the question is really applicable.
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GPY"to date" is such an idiomatic expression that I'm not sure the question is really applicable.
I see. Thank you for the reply.
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"To date" is an adverbial in that sentence.
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teechr"To date" is an adverbial in that sentence.
Yes, that's the function but my question is about the form of "date". I think it's a noun, an uncountable one, a sort of "today" (a noun, not adverb), i.e. meaning "this present day".
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AnonymousI think it's a noun,
That much I agree with.
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AnonymousYes, that's the function but my question is about the form of "date". I think it's a noun, an uncountable one, a sort of "today" (a noun, not adverb), i.e. meaning "this present day".
But "today" would still be an adverb in "We haven't had a reply today."
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teechrBut "today" would still be an adverb in "We haven't had a reply today."
Yes, "today" is an adverb there. But in "to date" there is a preposition "to" whose object "date" cannot be an adverb. It's the whole idiom "to date" (in the form of prepositional phrase) that functions as an adverbial.

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