0
Hoca Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

Why is 'bread' uncountable?

Hi again. I asked this question before here but somehow I can't find my post. Somebody had answered my question "Why is bread uncountable?" I remember not too much....

Also if bread is uncountable why isn't watermelon?
  

Top answer

Hi Hoca, You can reach your previous posts by clicking the "my forums" button on the top of the page.. Best regards, DjB

  • Hi Hoca, You can reach your previous posts by clicking the "my forums" button on the top of the page..
  • Best regards, DjB
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.

4 Answers
0
Hi Hoca,

You can reach your previous posts by clicking the "my forums" button on the top of the page..

Best regards,

DjB
0
HocaHi again. I asked this question before here but somehow I can't find my post. Somebody had answered my question "Why is bread uncountable?" I remember not too much....

Also if bread is uncountable why isn't watermelon?
'Bir ekmek' is perfectly correct, but in English we say two loaves of bread two slices
0
HocaHi again. I asked this question before here but somehow I can't find my post. Somebody had answered my question "Why is bread uncountable?" I remember not too much....Also if bread is uncountable why isn't watermelon?
Hello Hoca

In old times, Anglo-Saxons used "a bread" to mean "a broken piece", "a crumb" or "a bit". Instead they used "loaf" to
0
if bread is uncountable why isn't watermelon?
The premisses of the question are incorrect. "watermelon" can also be uncountable.

Regardless of what word you use in your language for a loaf of bread - the object that can be carried about - "bread" in English is not an object, but a substance.
If I take a piece of bread, that is, a piece of the substanc

Related Questions