Username
jayles
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August 12, 2010
Total number of comments
748
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fewer / less
- May 8, 2014, 11:37pm
My take on it is that "fewer" + uncountable noun is nonsensical, as "fewer" implies countable number.
Have diphthongs gone for good?
- May 8, 2014, 8:53pm
BTW I suppose you guys realise you can upvote your own comments! ;=))
Have diphthongs gone for good?
- May 8, 2014, 8:52pm
I would suggest that proficient English readers do not read by sounding out each syllable to understand the word; each word becomes a sort of symbol pretty much like Chinese, so whether it is orthographic or not becomes irrelevant to the reading process; it just needs to be consistent and familiar.
Spelling is an issue when we're learning to read and write and in an ESOL context; for most of us we are past it (or very much past it).
fewer / less
- May 5, 2014, 6:18pm
less means smaller (in size or number); fewer = smaller in number.
a) Her troubles were fewer than her husband's.
b) Her troubles were less than her husband's.
Doesn't really come up much though.
fewer / less
- May 5, 2014, 6:52am
If "fewer is more" means something other than "less is more", then we have a semantic distinction, but it's very small.
Is "few" is the result of Viking "package tours" ?
fewer / less
- May 5, 2014, 12:33am
Few is more
fewer / less
- May 5, 2014, 12:32am
Never in the history of humane endeavour have so many owed so much to so less.
There were, apparently, a less people there
“enamored with” and “enamored by”
- April 29, 2014, 9:32pm
I've seen it suggested that the past-simple
“enamored with” and “enamored by”
- April 29, 2014, 12:25am
Murphy also notes the well-known Americanism: sentences like:
"Did you finish your homework yet?"
Is this too an example of something borrowed from some earlier form of English?
Questions
Five eggs is too many | July 1, 2013 |
“The plants were withered” Adjective or passive? | August 27, 2013 |
Which sound “normal” to you? | March 31, 2014 |
“it’s the put-er-on-er-er” | April 7, 2014 |
fewer / less
@HS "She had less family responsibilities" : one might (with a stretch) construe this as meaning the responsibilities were similar in number but less onerous; it is perhaps just a bit vaguer than "fewer responsibilities", although I wouldn't care to argue the toss.
"She had less responsibilities" does get several hits on google.
Whether one approves is one's own problem.