Alexandre Meslin
Some work or some works Hi all! Someone once told me that work is uncountable, so, when writing an academic article, the correct is to use "Related Work". But my question now is about the use in a sentence. What is correct: "in some works" or "in some work". Thanks!
Jul 14, 2020 10:03 PM
Answers · 4
The word "work" used as a noun has different meanings. You can use it in the plural as a countable noun, i.e. "Shakespeare's works" (many different plays). But when you use it without the "s", as an uncountable noun, it can take a more general meaning (i.e. "I love the work of Shakespeare") or even refer to the combined sum of Shakespeare's creative produt over his career.
July 14, 2020
Yes, in academic writing, "related work". Collective. Only as below, when you want to stress that there was more than one output, do you use "works". . Not sure how you would use "in some work" or "in some works". In some of the related work, [2,5,7] we see an inappropriately small sample size. . In some works of the late composer, JSB, the .... was superb.
July 15, 2020
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