atssarbia
Member
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2010
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Korean
- Home Country
- South Korea
- Current Location
- South Korea
1) At first, is it correct in grammar? Can I use it in conversation when I refer to one item (for example the shirt that you are wearing now) or 14 items? and, if I only use clothes without 'a pair of ~', does it mean only plural? or is 'a pair of clothes' itself worng?
2) Clothes, itself, mean only more than two items? For example, when mom tell his child "Take off the clothes!", does it mean, take off your shirt and pants etc. not one item?
3) Pants have two legs but it is a piece of clothing (=one item), and in binoculars, glasses it is the same case. But in clothes case, it's not that case?
4) are 'the clothes, these clothes, your clothes, that clothes' all more than two items?
Please, help me. It makes me confused.
2) Clothes, itself, mean only more than two items? For example, when mom tell his child "Take off the clothes!", does it mean, take off your shirt and pants etc. not one item?
3) Pants have two legs but it is a piece of clothing (=one item), and in binoculars, glasses it is the same case. But in clothes case, it's not that case?
4) are 'the clothes, these clothes, your clothes, that clothes' all more than two items?
Please, help me. It makes me confused.