Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A bison
And if you just said: bison.
You would know exactly what you mean, and everyone would know it too.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at this even: On the long journey, we drank a lot.
Or: On long journey, we drank a lot.
Makes no difference, at all. Sure, it sounds wrong, but the meaning is the same.
The first is referencing a particular, unique long journey. The recerent would be apparent from the previous conversation for pragmatically appropriate English.
The second sentence is totally ambiguous - all long journeys? Some long journeys? A particular long jouney?
Languages which don’t use definite and indefinite articles mark this distinction in other ways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at this even: On the long journey, we drank a lot.
Or: On long journey, we drank a lot.
Makes no difference, at all. Sure, it sounds wrong, but the meaning is the same.
The first is referencing a particular, unique long journey. The recerent would be apparent from the previous conversation for pragmatically appropriate English.
The second sentence is totally ambiguous - all long journeys? Some long journeys? A particular long jouney?
Languages which don’t use definite and indefinite articles mark this distinction in other ways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look at this even: On the long journey, we drank a lot.
Or: On long journey, we drank a lot.
Makes no difference, at all. Sure, it sounds wrong, but the meaning is the same.
*drank lot
Anonymous wrote:Look at this even: On the long journey, we drank a lot.
Or: On long journey, we drank a lot.
Makes no difference, at all. Sure, it sounds wrong, but the meaning is the same.
Anonymous wrote:Look at this even: On the long journey, we drank a lot.
Or: On long journey, we drank a lot.
Makes no difference, at all. Sure, it sounds wrong, but the meaning is the same.
Anonymous wrote:A bison
Anonymous wrote:There is a big difference between "the" and "a." Look at these two sentences:
1) The boy is running down the street.
2) A boy is running down the street.
In #1 you know it is a specific boy, one who within the context of the paragraph has been identified. In #2 you only know that some random boy is running down the street.