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 EITAN
 
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							| can you help me? 
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							|   How do we say?????????    I will take sunscreen.    OR     I will take a sunscreen.   OR     I will take a yellow sunscreen.   Which sentence is grammatical o.k?     They have a baby and a little dog-Is this sentence correct?   Can I say : They have a baby and little dog?         |  2 Apr 2013      
					
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 FrauSue
 
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							| I would say: I will put on some sunscreen. If you are in the shop and looking for new sunscreen, I would say: I �ll have the yellow bottle of sunscreen / I �ll have a bottle of sunscreen. 
 They have a baby and a little dog. (The second sentence sounds like "baby and little" are the adjectives describing the dog.) 
 I hope that helps. |  2 Apr 2013     
					
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 MoodyMoody
 
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							| Sunscreen:     Beach umbrella:      I put on or apply sunscreen; I take or get an umbrella. Since sunscreen is noncount/uncountable, you can take a bottle of sunscreen or take [some] sunscreen, but not with "a."   I prefer "a baby and a little dog, but I don �t think the other is technically wrong. I respectfully disagree with FrauSue; I would say " little baby dog," not a "baby and little dog." I can see the confusion, though; there are examples where this would be ambiguous.   |  2 Apr 2013     
					
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 abba
 
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							| By the way, what �s the verb used with sunscreen? Do  you spread the sunscreen  or do you rub it on your body? |  2 Apr 2013     
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| Put it on. If you are doing this for someone else, they might urge you to rub it in. |  2 Apr 2013     
					
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