|
|||
Allergy / Allergies -
07-09-2011, 01:59 PM
Hi, I was reading an article regarding soy allergy and peanut allergies. What I am curious is, why soy allergy and peanut allergies and not peanut allergy?
I am confused with these words: Allergy, Allergies and Allergic. Could someone explain the differences to me? And I also came across food allergy and food allergies? What is the difference? 失敗をしない人間はいない。 いるのは失敗から立ち直れない奴と 立ち直れる奴だ。 |
|
|||
07-09-2011, 06:43 PM
I was actually asking why did the article stated that "Peanut allergies (instead of allergy) are on the increase, and are a source of great concern for manufacturers and consumers alike."
My question was why did the word "allergies" used instead of "allergy" in the sentence? Sorry for the confusion. 失敗をしない人間はいない。 いるのは失敗から立ち直れない奴と 立ち直れる奴だ。 |
|
|||
08-02-2011, 12:21 PM
Hi wolfrainvn, take this article for example Peanuts - One of the nine most common food allergens
"It was once thought that peanut allergies were lifelong. However, recent studies show some children may outgrow their peanut allergy. Consult your allergist before reintroducing peanut products." 失敗をしない人間はいない。 いるのは失敗から立ち直れない奴と 立ち直れる奴だ。 |
|
|||
08-02-2011, 01:12 PM
Quote:
It was once thought that all types of peanut allergies were life long. However, recent studies show some types of peanut allergies were cured when the children grew up , though other types of peanut allergies were life long. |
|
|||
08-09-2011, 12:49 AM
Quote:
I think allergies is plural in the first case because they're talking about many cases of people who are allergic to peanuts, rather than many kinds of allergies, although they may well mean that too. I'm not sure the difference matters there. In the second case they used singular because they were trying to talk about the allergy that an individual has. The problem here is using the plural children, and then using a singular noun as the thing being possessed by the plural. It's akin to the error of using their to avoid the awkward but inclusive his or her instead of defaulting to his when gender is unknown, and probably why they incorrectly chose the singular allergy. It's a usage that's become so common, some grammarians are even reluctantly beginning to accept it under some circumstances. But I think the sentence should have been written, "...children may outgrow their peanut allergies." Or, "...a child may outgrow his or her peanut allergy." That's the sort of sentence where more and more you will see even professional writers replace his or her with their as if it were a singular possessive, sacrificing grammatical correctness in exchange for political correctness and the flow of the sentence. |
Thread Tools | |
|
|