The difference between what kind of and what kinds of What's the difference between "of" and "of",

The difference between what kind of and what kinds of What's the difference between "of" and "of",


In fact, there is not much difference between the two phrases
1. Generally speaking, what kind of plus countable noun is singular or uncountable noun, but in fact, it can also be plural
What kind of present do you want
What kind of presents do you want
2. What kinds of is usually followed by plural noun, but it can also be used in spoken English
Conclusion: you can follow what kind of with countable nouns singular or uncountable nouns, what kind of with plural nouns
In fact, the two can almost be mixed, you can find many examples are used very casually, not very different



The usage of what kind of
What kind of presentation do you want or what kind of presentations do you want?


It depends on how many you send
What kind of present do you want
What kind of presents do you want
If you want to add s to kind, you have to add s to present
What kinds of presents do you want?



What kind of of and what kinds of mean


The former mainly asks which kind, which kind, for example, I like to eat oranges, but I like to eat the green oranges; the latter mainly asks which kinds, for group attribute classification, which kinds, such as a basket of miscellaneous fruits, peaches, apples and oranges. I don't know if I can help you



Noun verb adjective
Spirit, milk, dust, irrigation, shining, fishing fire, arm hazy, clear, awakened, flowing fruit reflected and washed away
Steep and swaying Three Gorges hard waterfall
Noun:--------------------------------------------------
Verb:--------------------------------------------------
Adjectives:----------------------------------------------------


Noun: Spirit milk dust fishing fire arm fruit Three Gorges waterfall
Verb: irrigate, shine, wake up, flow, clean
Adjective: majestic, hazy, clear, steep, swaying, hard



Is the word "steep slope" a verb, a noun or an adjective


A noun
For example, I go to school every day through a steep slope



Verb noun character adjective adverb
Example: verb noun character adjective adverb
act action actor active actively
It means the same as the one on the second floor!


creat creation creator creative creatively
talk talking talker talkative talkatively
explore exploration explorer explorative exploratively
succeed success success successful successfully
fool fool fool foolish foolishly
use use user useful(useless) usefully(uselessly)
care care carer careful(careless) carefully(carelessly)
.
I have to do my homework. Is that what you mean?



Why does noun plus ing become adjective?


It's the verb + ing
This is a word formation thing. I can't say it. Why don't you remember it



Does the verb ing have the same meaning as gerund?


Certainly not
It is a change of verb according to need and past participle of past tense
Gerund means that the verb itself can't be the subject, only the noun can be the subject, so + ing becomes gerund. From the appearance, it's the same as the verb ing, but it's just changed its name at this time. Besides being a noun, gerund also has some meaning of being or going on
It's troublesome to say. Just look at the examples
The bus is coming
Coming to America is my dream



What is added after "than"?


There are two parts of speech: conjunction and preposition
So it can be followed by sentences, - ing, infinitives, pronouns, nouns and words equivalent to nouns
She is a better player than (she was) last year.
He loves me more than you do.
She should know better than to poke the animal with her umbrella.
I'm older than her.
It never takes more than an hour.



Is gerund the same thing as the ing form of verb


The original verb plus "ing" forms two kinds of words: the present participle and the gerund, both of which have the function of verb, but the present participle has the part of adjective and the gerund has the part of part of speech, which makes them play different roles in the sentence. This is the basis for distinguishing them