23 сент. 2010 г. · Pain is never countable. When speaking of pain in general terms (as in this sentence), you don't use an article. When speaking more specifically ... |
28 сент. 2011 г. · It depends on the context. Pain can be countable or uncountable. You can have a pain or you can have pains or you can have pain. |
20 апр. 2014 г. · To get to the plural. "I'm taking aspirin for this toothache, but I think I need another pain killer as well." "I have Tylenol." "That's good." |
8 мая 2018 г. · Pain (uncountable) is measured in amount - therefore pain is either great or less. A pain (countable) is measured in intensity- therefore a pain ... |
26 янв. 2023 г. · Should I use "a" here? He fell heavily and this caused him (a) great pain. Oxford lists "pain" as both countable and uncountable. |
3 нояб. 2017 г. · "Ceremony" and "thought" can be both countable and uncountable and here they are uncountable. "Combat" and "pain" are usually uncountable. |
28 апр. 2014 г. · It so happens that "pain" and "difference" can be either countable or uncountable. That is not true for most nouns. |
10 нояб. 2008 г. · (Aspirin is both countable and uncountable - countable, an aspirin is one tablet; uncountable, aspirin is the name of the compound.) You must ... |
18 дек. 2012 г. · Concise Oxford Spanish Dictionary © 2009 Oxford University Press: pain 1 /peɪn/ sustantivo uncountable or countable (physical) dolor m; |
2 февр. 2010 г. · We say "I have a headache", not "I have headache" and it's not that we can count "headache" like one headache, two headaches. |
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