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 lofthanzaaa
 
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							| "All of a sudden"  or "all of the sudden" 
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							| Dear teachers, 
 I have been asked a question by a student which I couldn �t answer. What is the difference between "all of a sudden" and "all of the sudden". 
 Please help me |  29 Mar 2010      
					
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 PhilipR
 
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							| All of a sudden is correct. All of the sudden isn �t. |  29 Mar 2010     
					
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 marthabene
 
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							| As far as I know "all of a sudden" is American English and "all of the sudden" British English, but for me "all of a sudden" is the correct one. check this out http://www.google.com/search?q=site:bbc.co.uk+%22all+the+sudden%22+&hl=en&start=10&sa=N |  29 Mar 2010     
					
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 lofthanzaaa
 
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							| Do you also know the difference between "to be in a mood" and " to be in the mood". Thanks for the help. |  29 Mar 2010     
					
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 PhilipR
 
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							| To be in the mood is correct. 
 I �ve never heard to be in a mood as such; you could say to be in a good/bad/... mood though. |  29 Mar 2010     
					
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 teacherjabir
 
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							| Sorry. The answers here are not correct. If you are in a mood you feel unhappy. But for the first question, I can �t judge but I feel it needs more clarification. Maybe a native speaker can help. |  29 Mar 2010     
					
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 Lina Ladybird
 
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							| Your 1st question: as far as I know the expression �all of the sudden� doesn �t exist. It �s wrong! You must use �all of a sudden�. There is an American expression though: it�s "all the sudden" without the word �of�!!   Your 2nd question: you can �be in the mood � (to do something) or you can �be in a good or bad mood � (nothing follows this expression).   |  29 Mar 2010     
					
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 GIOVANNI
 
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							| All of the sudden is improper English.  Both Topolina and Philip are right on both counts. |  29 Mar 2010     
					
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 dennismychina
 
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							| Philip is spot on. In the mood��������.you feel like doing something.  I�m in the mood for / to do���.. In a mood needs clarification / qualification. In a good, bad or an indifferent mood. And there is no the in all of a sudden.  All of a sudden������.. �suddenly� Enjoy. |  29 Mar 2010     
					
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 teachertonyinchina
 
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							| In England we use both expressions; In a mood;  Is a negative expression usually meaning in a bad mood. In the mood;  As explained by Dennis.   All of the sudden is NOT British English. We use all of a sudden.   |  29 Mar 2010     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| I don �t know about Topolina �s source, but in my 56 years living in the US, I �ve never heard "all the sudden".   Bruce |  29 Mar 2010     
					
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