What do you like best

What do you like best


I like English best .



What do you like best and what do you like the best
what do you like best
what do you like the best
What's the difference? One has the, one doesn't have the
Why does one have the and the other don't?


No difference. According to Zhang Daozhen's practical English grammar P313, we can use the definite article or not before the superlative of adverbs, and use more when not



We each have or has a CD in our hands


The second one upstairs is wrong. We each is followed by have because the central word is we
Each of us has, because the central word is each



Why does each gilr use the singular and the plural


When they are the subject and each is the appositive, the predicate verb is plural, such as: they each put forward a proposal



Have some difficulties or difficulty in


Both Ok
have some difficulties with sth
have difficulty in doing sth
Different phrase forms, one meaning



Is some singular or plural in this sentence?
I saw a sentence "some culture and e history". Is "some" singular?


Some can be interpreted as "some"



.have some difficulty or difficulties?


There are two ways to understand. One means some, and the other means differences
But there is also a meaning of "some", which is followed by the singular
How to use it depends on the context
I hope I can help you



Do you want multiplicity in have difficulty with sth?


Difficulty can be countable (for concrete) or uncountable (for abstract)
There are two typical phrases
Have difficulty in doing / with sth
Come across difficulties / over difficulties denote specific difficulties and can be counted



Have no followed by plural or singular
Have no followed by plural or singular?
It is reasonable to say that the sentence pattern "have no idea" is singular?


That's because no idea means "don't know" equals I have no idea and I don't know
Have no can be added with uncountable nouns or countable plural nouns



No plus singular or plural, or is there a difference between the two


When no is used as an adjective, it can be followed by singular, plural and uncountable nouns
There's no pen in my pencil case.
He saw no planes in the sky.
She has no milk.