[Grammar] A Standard Procedure

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EricaWW

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a) "It is a standard procedure to handcuff suspects."
b) "It is standard procedure to handcuff suspects."

"Procedure" is both countable and uncountable. Could one of the above be better than the other?
 
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It is standard procedure.
 
a) "It is a standard procedure to handcuff suspects."
b) "It is standard procedure to handcuff suspects."

"Procedure" is both countable and uncountable. Could one of the above be better than the other?
We hear b more often than a.
 
Does it mean:

"It is a standard procedure to handcuff suspects."

is possible and acceptable since putting handcuffs on a suspect could be read as a single unit of activity?
 
Riquecohen has answered your question already.

(a) is understandable; (b) is idiomatic.

Rover
 
Merriam-Webster Dictionary

aa) "The SWAT team followed standard procedure by moving very deliberately."
bb) "The SWAT team followed standard procedures by moving very deliberately."

Are aa) and bb) the same?
 
In post #6, the countable and uncountable versions are the same; but in post #1, they are not.
 
In post #6, the countable and uncountable versions are the same; but in post #1, they are not.
It's not a question of countable or uncountable, it's a question of what is idiomatic and what is not, as I think you know very well.
 
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