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JOSEPH
'make a contribution', is 'contribution' countable?
In the sentence:
Cambridge has nurtured great scientsts, thinkers and poets such as Newton, Bacon, Milton, Byron and Darwin, who *made an outstanding contribution to the progress of mankind*.
Since there many scientists mentioned, should it be 'who make outstanding contributions to the progress of mankind'?
Which expression is better?
In addition, besides 'nurture', from the above sentence, are there some other suitable words and phrases to be used there?
Jun 25, 2009 3:57 AM
Answers · 2
Hi Jospeh,
"Contribution" is countable in your example and uncountable in the example Anatoliy mentioned.
In the example you mentioned:
'who made an outstanding contribution to the progress of mankind.'
here it is singular for using "an" ,however it could be written in the plural:
'who made outstanding contributions to the progress of mankind'.
The difference is that the first sentence refers to the help those scientists gave altogether collectively while the second counts their efforts separately.
As a substitute for "nurture" in this context you could possibly use:
"Cambridge helped developing great scientists"
"Cambridge brought up great scientists"
June 25, 2009
Contribution can be how countable so and uncountable. For examle:
The school sees its job as preparing students to make a contribution to society. - countable
All the money has been raised by voluntary contribution - uncountable When you give money, time, help etc
June 25, 2009
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JOSEPH
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English
Learning Language
English
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