"A" before "soup"

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Rachel Adams

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Is it wrong to use "a" before soup?

"Ramen is a spicy soup." Or if I say "My favourite food is Ramen. It's a spicy soup."
 
It's grammatically but not factually correct.
 
Is it wrong to use "a" before soup?
Not only is it not wrong, it is required!
Those sentences are saying:

Ramen is a/an [adjective] (type of) soup.
It's a/an [adjective] (type of) food.
In other words, "type of" is implicit in those sentences.
 
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No only is it not wrong, it is required!
Those sentences are saying:

Ramen is a/an [adjective] (type of) soup.
It's a/an [adjective] (type of) food.
In other words, "type of" is implicit in those sentences.

Is this another difference between BrE and AmE?
 
Where are you seeing a difference? All the responses so far have indicated that "a" is required in your sentences.
 
Where are you seeing a difference? All the responses so far have indicated that "a" is required in your sentences.

Oh, I must have misunderstood GoesStation's explanation. It is grammatically correct but not factually.
 
Oh, I must have misunderstood GoesStation's explanation. It is grammatically correct but not factually.
Right. Ramen can contain chili, but it's not otherwise spicy. Most ramen isn't.
 
Not only is it not wrong, it is required!
Those sentences are saying:

Ramen is a/an [adjective] (type of) soup.
It's a/an [adjective] (type of) food.
In other words, "type of" is implicit in those sentences.

In this article (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food) you'll find the following examples:

a) Finger food is food meant to be eaten directly using the hands.
b) Fresh food is food which has not been preserved and has not spoiled yet.
c) Organic food is food produced by methods that comply with the standards of organic farming.

Type of is implicit in all these sentences, but there are no articles. Are they wrong?
 
Type of is implicit in all these sentences,
No. "food" is used in its generic sense in those sentences. They're like definitions.
What is fresh food?
Fresh food is: food which has not been preserved.
 
No. "food" is used in its generic sense in those sentences. They're like definitions.
What is fresh food?
Fresh food is: food which has not been preserved.

So, fresh food is not a (type of) food which has not been preserved, right?
 
Correct. In that sentence, it's not a type of food. It is any food (which has not been preserved).
 
Correct. In that sentence, it's not a type of food. It is any food (which has not been preserved).

Just to clarify, if I wrote Fresh food is a food which has not been preserved, would it be incorrect, or would a be read as a short form for a type of?

There are also the following sentences in the article:

A negative-calorie food is food that supposedly requires more food energy to be digested than the food provides.
A functional food is a food given an additional function by adding new ingredients or more of existing ingredients.


These are also definitions, but for some reason they take a. And what is confusing is that the latter takes a after is, while the former doesn't.
 
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Just to clarify, if I wrote Fresh food is a food which has not been preserved, would it be incorrect, or would a be read as a short form for a type of?
It would be clumsy at best.


A negative-calorie food is food that supposedly requires more food energy to be digested than the food provides.
A functional food is a food given an additional function by adding new ingredients or more of existing ingredients.


These are also definitions, but for some reason they take a. And what is confusing is that the latter takes a after is, while the former doesn't.
The first one is incorrect.
 

Ramen is a spicy soup.
Fresh food is a food which has not been preserved.


Why is a perfectly correct in the former meaning a type of and inappropriate in the latter? Both statements are general.
 
Where are you seeing a difference? All the responses so far have indicated that "a" is required in your sentences.

You used "see" in the progressive. Can we non-native speakers use it too?
 
You used "see" in the progressive. Can we non-native speakers use it too?

I don't see why not, provided you use it idiomatically. I don't think there are many cases where it's natural.
 
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