Marisa
AMOUNT or DEAL?? Is there any difference between them when talking about QUANTITIES?? Help me please Hi!! I'm an English teacher from Spain and yesterday in my student's books I found these two sentences: - I've just been given a great amount of news - I've passed my exams. - Seb put a great deal of effort into organising the party. The students asked me if there were any differences in the use of amount and deal, and I didn't know it. Can anyone help me solve this doubt??
20. Apr. 2017 08:03
Antworten · 5
A "deal" is a significant but unspecified amount. You can't have a small deal of something, and deals don't have exact quantities. Deal is also much more informal than amount: - The gravel delivery came and now I've got this great big deal of gravel sitting in my driveway. - I've got a bill here for half a cubic meter of gravel: is that the right amount? - The smallest amount this instrument can measure is 300 parts per billion. (Edited to add a note about your first sentence: "I've just been given a great amount of news - I've passed my exams." That's really odd. Passing one's exams is only one piece of news, and while "one" is certainly an amount, it's not a "great" amount. It would be correct to say: - I've just been given a great piece/bit/item of news - I've passed my exams. In certain unusual situations, you might be able to say: - These are all the newspapers and news reports I missed while I was on my wilderness vacation: I've just been given a great amount of news. But that would be much more natural as "a great deal of news.")
20. April 2017
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