He has (a) dogged determination to overcome/end his internet addiction.

z7655431

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"He has a dogged determination to overcome/end his internet addiction."

I have two questions about the sentence above I wrote.

1. Can I say "he has dogged determination" without the indefinite article a?
2. Between overcome and end, I feel that "overcome" fits better here. But is it also fine to use "end" here?
 
Are you sure you want to put that in the passive voice?

As for your question, I think keeping the 'a' is best. It is, in my humble opinion, more natural that way. As for your second question, I agree that you can use either one, but "overcome" is better.
 
Who mentioned the passive voice?
If you insist that "He has fogged determination" is not passive voice then I yield to you.
 
I do. "He subject has transitive verb dogged determination object."
 
If you insist that "He has fogged determination" is not passive voice then I yield to you.

The passive form of that sentence would be "(A) dogged determination is had by him."

See the UE definition of passive voice. It requires a form of the 'be' verb and a past participle - both of which are missing in the original sentence. Here's a guide from the UE site.


"He has a dogged determination to overcome/end his internet addiction."

I have two questions about the sentence above I wrote.

1. Can I say "he has dogged determination" without the indefinite article a? Yes, but I think it's better with the definite article.
2. Between overcome and end, I feel that "overcome" fits better here. But is it also fine to use "end" here? 'End' is fine.
 
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If you insist that "He has fogged determination" is not passive voice then I yield to you.
Don't forget the passive test - if you can add "by zombies" to the end and it makes a grammatical sentence, then it's passive.
"He has dogged determination by zombies" doesn't fulfil the criterion. Just in case, you meant the whole sentence, "He has a dogged determination to overcome/end his internet addiction by zombies" doesn't work either.
 

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