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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Uncountable

Hi,
Can 'animal' be treated as an uncountable noun? I couldn't find it this in the dictionaries.
For example:
Pollution harms both man and animal.
  

Top answer

This would be the natural phrasing: Pollution harms both humans and animals. ) Animal is very rarely used as a category of life forms which do not use photosynthesis as their energy source. This category includes humans.

  • This would be the natural phrasing: Pollution harms both humans and animals.
  • ) Animal is very rarely used as a category of life forms which do not use photosynthesis as their energy source.
  • This category includes humans.
  • For example, Everyday things can be classified as animal, vegetable or mineral.
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1 Answers
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This would be the natural phrasing:
Pollution harms both humans and animals. (It's not very good for plants, either.)

Animal is very rarely used as a category of life forms which do not use photosynthesis as their energy source. This category includes humans.

For example, Everyday things can be classified as animal, vegetable or mineral.

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