Luiz
Is there a difference between "I went to gym" and "I went to the gym"? Does it follow the same pattern as "go to (the) school / hospital"? Without "the" if you went there for studying / seeing a doctor AND with "the" if you went there for something else?
14. Nov. 2020 01:25
Antworten · 7
3
You have to have "the" in your sentence. The difference with "school" is that school can be an action (verb) and not just a place. Just like saying, "I go to work." You are going to where you work to do work. But you don't go to a "hospital" to do "hospital". Hospital is not a verb, it is just a place.
14. November 2020
2
'The' is used when the specific physical building is meant. 1. I went to the school to talk to my son's teacher. 2. I live quite near the hospital so I often hear the sound of ambulances. 3. Her dad works at the prison. In the above sentences, the specific building is important. We do not use 'the' when we are using these words to describe a state or fact about the person but the physical building is unimportant. 1. Children go to school at age 5 in the UK = when this stage of life starts 2. She was quite seriously ill so she went to hospital = her state was serious enough for hospital treatment. 3. Her dad is in prison = he has been convincted of a crime. The specific building is not important in the above cases. We only say, 'the gym'. I suppose we consider that, in this case, we always mean a specific building.
14. November 2020
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