0
Anonymous Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Uncountable "Comrade"

I was showing respect to his willingness to risk his life for comrade.


Could you tell me if the sentence is grammatical? I think it should demand 'a comrade' or 'comrades'.

  

Top answer

anonymous Could you tell me if the sentence is grammatical? It is not. anonymous I think it should demand 'a comrade' or 'comrades'.

  • anonymous Could you tell me if the sentence is grammatical?
  • It is not.
  • anonymous I think it should demand 'a comrade' or 'comrades'.
  • You can't say it "should" demand anything.
  • It simply demands it, and yes, "a comrade", but "his comrades" is better than a bare "comrades".
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
anonymousCould you tell me if the sentence is grammatical?

It is not.

anonymousI think it should demand 'a comrade' or 'comrades'.

You can't say it "should" demand anything. It simply demands it, and yes, "a comrade", but "his comrades" is better than a bare "comrades". Also, I would not use "respect to" there. "To

Related Questions