Do grandpa and grandma have to be in capital letters in sentences? I found it like this in a famous book.
What are the differences between lives and life?
eg.
a. Their lives are started to be together once they married 20 years ago.
b, Their life are started to be together once they married 20 years ago.
( I believe life is uncountable, am I right?)
Ju
Ju, please ask different questions in separate threadsIf they are child's words for granparents in general, then there is no need for a capital letter. If they are used as names, then theu should begin with a capital letter.
It must be hard for a grandpa if he lives a long way from his grandchildren.
"Will you teach me how to whistle, Grandpa?"
I'll address the second question. Life is not necessarily uncountable. "Many lives were lost in the earthquake." Sorry, I'm lousy thinking up examples, but you get the idea, I hope.
In your example, I'd use life, because you're referring to the couple's shared experiences, which in our minds usually counts as one life, their shared life.
The sentence needs re-wording, though. How about: Their life together started twenty years ago, when they got married.
Actually, I'd say something like they've been together for twenty years, since they got married, or they've been together since they got married, twenty years ago.
Hope this helped.
H.
Not a teacher
Not really.
Life: /laɪf/
Lives: /laɪvz/
The f is voiceless but the v is voiced, and therefore followed by a voiced s sound /z/.
Did this help?
Note that the vowel is different in lives with:
I live here, and he lives here too.
One life was lost, but three lives were saved.
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.