He has an excessive appetite.

thehammer

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Should I use a/an before excessive?

1- He has an excessive appetite.
2- An excessive use of fertilisers can harm soil's productivity.
3- He has an excessive interest in swimming.
4- He has an excessive book.

I have sometimes seen a/an being used with excessive when nouns are countable and sometimes not. Could you please explain?
 

Barque

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The "an" qualifies the noun described by "excessive". But "an" is used because "excessive" starts with a vowel sound. "A" isn't used with "excessive".
 

thehammer

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The "an" qualifies the noun described by "excessive". But "an" is used because "excessive" starts with a vowel sound. "A" isn't used with "excessive"
Does 'He has an excessive book" mean "he has an extra book"?
 

Barque

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No, it doesn't mean he has an extra book. It means nothing. It's rubbish.
 

thehammer

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This sentence makes no sense to me. Where did you get it from?

I'll go so far as to say it's rubbish.
They all are my own sentences.
 

Barque

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2 works.

1 and 3 are understandable.

4 is rubbish.
 

thehammer

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Women with (an) excessive sex drive (sex mania) are generally termed nymphomaniacs.

When I was reading an article I saw this sentence. In the sentence, there was no article before excessive. I searched on ngram and found a lot of examples of 'an excessive sex drive'. Can you please explain?
 

thehammer

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You wrote the sentence. Did you think it meant the same as "He has an extra book"?
No. The sentence does not make sense I agree. I thought it could mean 'extra' so I put it as an example there.
 

Barque

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When I was reading an article I saw this sentence. In the sentence, there was no article before excessive. I searched on ngram and found a lot of examples of 'an excessive sex drive'. Can you please explain?

What's there to explain? It works with and without an article.

It also applies to men.

Men with [an] excessive sex drive generally get into trouble and make fools of themselves.
 

Barque

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No. The sentence does not make sense I agree. I thought it could mean 'extra' so I put it as an example there.
If you think it doesn't make sense, why did you use it?
 

emsr2d2

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"Excessive" means "more than necessary". If you wanted to use it in your context of books, it would need to be "He has an excessive number of books".
 

thehammer

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What's there to explain? It works with and without an article.

It also applies to men.

Men with [an] excessive sex drive generally get into trouble and make fools of themselves.
Thank you Barque. My problem is here that In post #1 'an' is necessary but in the post #12 why is 'an' not necessary?
 

Tarheel

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I don't see using it without the article (an).

It (excessive) is not in post #12.
 
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