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grammaire anglaise > déterminants + N
quantificateurs + N
many / a few + N
+
nom collectif (people)
ou
nom au pluriel régulier (reasons)
nom au pluriel régulier irrégulier (feet)
The Guardian Media p. 29 10 July 2006
The Guardian University 2006 p. 10 18 August 2006
LABOR: How Many Joblessadjectif nominalisé ?
Monday, Mar. 17, 1930 Time
How many workmen were jobless throughout the land last week not even the President of the U.S. knew. Government officials made guesses on unemployment, colored more by partisan politics than by positive facts. Senators flayed the Department of Labor for its paltry system of gathering labor statistics. The City of Milwaukee opened soup kitchens. Bread lines stretched out in Brooklyn. Manhattan's Bowery swarmed with sullen idle men. Communists staged demonstrations throughout the U.S. as well as abroad (see p. 21). Though these things combined to make the Hoover Administration acutely unemployment-conscious, none of them answered the question: how many jobless?
LABOR: How Many
Jobless?, T, 17.3.1930,
Voir aussi > Anglonautes >
Grammaire anglaise explicative - niveau avancé
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