"Uncorked" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
To release the stopper or plug from a bottle, especially of wine, so as to open it.
Lack of cooperation or willingness to work together; unwillingness to cooperate or collaborate, often due to stubbornness, habitual disagreement, or independent thinking.
Lacking coordination or the ability to act in a well-planned or orderly manner; lacking harmony or synchronization, both in the sense of lacking a professional harmony in someone/something (especially a team) and being out of synchronism (e.g. uncoordinated steps)
Not capable of being copyrighted.<br><br>Denoting or relating to a concept or expression that is not eligible to be granted copyright protection because it is not considered to be original or creative enough.
To remove the cork from a bottle, typically a wine bottle, to allow the contents to be poured.
The verb "uncorking" means the act of removing the protective covering or stopper from a bottle of wine, champagne, or other wine-like beverage.
Not accurately corrected or edited; having many mistakes.<br><br>Example: The student submitted an uncorrected draft of the essay, which needed several revisions before it was ready for submission.
Unrelated or independent of each other; not connected in a way that makes them affect one another.<br><br>Example: "The economic performance and weather are often uncorrelated, meaning that one does not directly impact the other."
Uncountables, also known as mass nouns, are nouns that refer to substances, materials, or concepts that cannot be counted individually. They are typically formed with a singular form, but are treated as plurals because they have no individual units.<br><br>Examples of uncountables include:<br><br> Water<br> Air<br> Sand<br> Dust<br> Sugar<br> Salt<br> Time<br> Weather<br> Music<br> Light<br><br>The key characteristics of uncountables are:<br><br> They cannot be counted or quantified<br> They do not have a distinct unit or individuality<br> They often refer to a whole or a mass<br> They are often abstract or intangible<br><br>To demonstrate this, consider the following:<br><br> "I have one water." (This would be an ordinal number, referring to a container of water)<br> "I have some water." (This implies a measure of water, but still, it's a single, uncountable substance)<br> "I have air." (This implies a flow or atmosphere around you)<br><br>To use uncountable nouns, you need to use quantifiers or phrases, like "some," "a lot of," "a little," "much," etc., or use singular verb forms.