How do you use the WORD AIR?
you just say it
since there isn't much use for quantifiers in English, it maybe a little difficult for you to learn Chinese quantifier words, it takes a rather long time for you to practise and to memorise some rules.
The word twice is a numeral Quantifier it's called an adverb in dictionaries because "adverb" is the traditional wastebasket category -- if you don't know what the hell it's doing there, call it an adverb.
Without seeing the following two statements, one could not say if the two statements mean the same thing. Quantifier sequences are used to specify repetitions of characters in patterns.
The word "air" is in the King James Version of the Bible 39 times. It is in 39 verses.
Some cities have a smog problem because the inversion layer in the air above them does not allow dispersal of pollution.
It's a determiner, sometimes a quantifier.
No. The word fifty is acting as an adjective (or quantifier) and stars is a plural noun.
No, the word "both" is not a preposition. It is typically used as a quantifier to refer to two items or people together.
since there isn't much use for quantifiers in English, it maybe a little difficult for you to learn Chinese quantifier words, it takes a rather long time for you to practise and to memorise some rules.
The Existential Quantifier, usually written as a back-to-front capital E indicates the existence of a thing of a certain sort satisfying certain conditions. The Universal Quantifier, usually written as an upside-down capital A, indicates that every thing of a certain sort satisfies those conditions.
The word 'some' is used as a quantifier when the thing you're referring to is uncountable, or the quantity is not known. Whereas, the word 'few' is used when the thing you are referring to is countable or is in finite quantity
The word twice is a numeral Quantifier it's called an adverb in dictionaries because "adverb" is the traditional wastebasket category -- if you don't know what the hell it's doing there, call it an adverb.
A cardinal number, such as ten, or an ordinal number, such as first.
To determine if the following two statements mean the same thing, you would need to offer the quantifier sequences. Then, you could compare the sequences to determine if they are the same.
the air was very moist
Without seeing the following two statements, one could not say if the two statements mean the same thing. Quantifier sequences are used to specify repetitions of characters in patterns.
There is no Hebrew equivalent to this word, and no concept of it in Judaism. In Israel, they use the English word, which they pronounce as mee-see-on-air.