0
Vincent Teo Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

wheel / wheels

0Can I say,02br
02br
00(a) I had a bag. It has one pockets. It has no wheel / wheels. 02br
02br
00(b) I had a bag. It is red and pink.02br
02br
00(c) I had a bag. They are red and pink. 0-
  

Top answer

1font 00(a) I had a bag. It has one pockets. 02br 02br 01font 00 (b) I had a bag.

  • 1font 00(a) I had a bag.
  • It has one pockets.
  • 02br 02br 01font 00 (b) I had a bag.
  • 02font 02br 02br 00I had a bag.
  • 02br 02br 01font 00(c) I had a bag.
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.

9 Answers
0
1font00(a) I had a bag. It has one pockets. It has no wheel / wheels.02font02br
02br
00I had a bag, with one pocket but no wheels02br
02br
00or02br
02br
00I had a bag, which had a pocket and no wheels.02br
02br
01font00 (b) I had a bag. It is red and pink
0
0 a) I had a bag that had one pocket and not wheels.02br
00b) I had a red and pink bag.02br
00c) I had two bags, one red and one pink. 0-
0
0 Philip: «I had a bag that had one pocket and not wheels.»02br
02br
00 Shouldn't it be "... and _no_ wheels"? 0-
0
0Can I say,02br
02br
00"no wheel" instead of "no wheels"? why must use plural form? 0-
0
0Because you have more than one wheel, say for example in bags on both the end, so generally we say wheels., 0-
0
0 «"no wheel" instead of "no wheels"? why must use plural form?»02br
02br
00 For example: «This sentence has no subject» (because usually there's only one)0-
0
0It's a tricky question but I think I've come to understand it a bit.02br
02br
00I hope the following example helps.02br
02br
00Class, any question01b00s02b00? (Similarly, the pural is used because the speaker expects more than one question or at least generally, there would be more than one question)02br
02br
00O
0
0 you are right New2grammar, that generally we use plural 0-
0
0Oh, if we talk about the general, we use the plural. 02br
02br
00Thanks a lot!! All of you!! Thank you!! 0-

Related Questions