Leah Ma
Why the word ‘THE“ cannot put before "RIVERS" in this sentence? My father has finished in RIVERS all over Australia. I think this sentence should be: My father has finished in THE RIVERS all over Australia. "THE RIVERS" here, I think those rivers are just in Australia, not in the USA or England. So, they are special rivers. But the answer doest not use "THE", But if the river is Murray River, then can I use "THE MURRAY RIVER"?
24 de may. de 2013 3:04
Respuestas · 4
2
This explanation may not be textbook quality, but hopefully it helps you some! Using "the" or not will depend on context as well as whether or not you are being specific or general. Using "the" before "rivers" does not limit the rivers to Australian rivers, it would instead specify "rivers" instead of "ponds" (for example). Do you maybe mean "fished" instead of "finished"? If so, here are a few examples. Q- Where has your father fished in Australia? A- My father has fished in rivers all over Australia. Q- Has your father fished in the rivers, lakes, or ponds of Australia? A- My father has fished in the rivers all over Australia. In the first example you simply say "rivers" because you are answering where (in general) did your father fish. In the second example, you are comparing three types of locations and selecting one specific answer from the list, thus "the rivers" will work here. Also, yes, you can put "the" before "Murray River" and be correct. "The Murray River" is a proper noun, and these often follow different rules than normal nouns.
24 de mayo de 2013
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