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  1. 13. Jan. 2013 · Keith Bradford said: For a British person: Bread is a baked mixture of flour yeast and water. No plural. e.g. Bread is baked every day. A bread is a type of bread. Plural is possible but very rare, e.g. This baker has telve breads on sale: wheat flour, rye flour, mixed grains, etc. A loaf is a single unit of bread, typically 400g.

  2. 2. Sept. 2011 · English - the King's. Sep 2, 2011. #3. If you're referring to bread and butter as two separate things, you need "are". If you mean bread which has butter spread on it, then you need "is". "Bread and butter is delicious with a banana." "Food prices are going up all the time, for example bread and butter are now 20% more expensive than last year."

  3. 19. Nov. 2012 · Nov 20, 2012. #10. It is complicated because while Mack is correct that normally bread is uncountable, there are times when the word is used as a countable noun, and as MikeLynn mentions, that's when the intended meaning is "kinds of," "types of" or "varieties of" - in this case "kinds of bread." "She makes the most delicious breads," therefore ...

  4. 3. Feb. 2018 · 1. Because there are two sorts of bread on the table, the child needs to specify which bread she wishes, brown bread. 2. Bread is not a substance regarded as generally harmful to children, unlike cannabis, industrial bleach, or sulfuric acid. Most children are allowed to handle and eat bread at mealtimes.

  5. 7. Apr. 2009 · Derby (central England) English - England. Apr 7, 2009. #5. You would not say " The bread and the butter is/are my favourite breakfast" unless you were referring to specific types of bread and butter already mentioned. "Bread and butter is my favourite breakfast." "Bread and butter are my favourite breakfast." K.

  6. 7. Apr. 2009 · Peruvian Spanish. "Bread and milk are good for you". Like it's been explained, it depends on how you're referring to "Bread and milk". If it's one whole thing, then it'd be a singular noun and therefore it'd be followed by " is". If it's two separate things, then it'd be plural and thus followed by " are".

  7. 9. Apr. 2019 · Apr 9, 2019. #6. I'd go for "were" or "are" myself because it seems to say that the individual components of bread-and-butter, namely bread and butter, are on the table. If it referred to buttered bread, I'd expect There is/was bread and butter on the table, but maybe that's just me. We still need to know if this refers to the past or the ...

  8. 8. Sept. 2006 · English, United States. Sep 8, 2006. #9. You are correct, Bilyana, loaf is not at all rare. (By the way, the correct plural is l oaves, not loafs.) In a restaurant you might ask for another slice of bread, another bread stick, or another piece of bread--depending on the particular form of bread they are serving. B.

  9. 6. Feb. 2009 · American English. Dec 13, 2010. #8. In American English, "don't have" or "have no" would be used in place of "haven't got," but then "bread" would need an adjective: "I have no bread" or "I don't have any bread." While "I haven't any bread" is "fine" grammatically, it does not sound like 21st-century American English to me; I just don't think ...

  10. 20. Dez. 2020 · Dec 20, 2020. #3. A doorstop or a doorstep (both BrE) is a very thickly cut slice of bread, perhaps an inch (25 mm) thick*. The word can also be used for a sandwich, which would still be called a "doorstop", not a "doorstop sandwich", if it is made from two thick slices of bread. Both "doorstop" and "doorstep" are used. I grew up with "doorstop ...