Why is “Reports” in the sentence below without the article “The”?Why is “sensor fusion” without...

Shall I use personal or official e-mail account when registering to external websites for work purpose?

Pristine Bit Checking

Is it possible to make sharp wind that can cut stuff from afar?

Is window.confirm() accessible?

Why did the Germans forbid the possession of pet pigeons in Rostov-on-Don in 1941?

How to make payment on the internet without leaving a money trail?

Is domain driven design an anti-SQL pattern?

What causes the sudden spool-up sound from an F-16 when enabling afterburner?

Prime joint compound before latex paint?

Symmetry in quantum mechanics

New order #4: World

Why do we use polarized capacitors?

What does 'script /dev/null' do?

What is the command to reset a PC without deleting any files

Are objects structures and/or vice versa?

A poker game description that does not feel gimmicky

Information to fellow intern about hiring?

What happens when a metallic dragon and a chromatic dragon mate?

Ideas for 3rd eye abilities

What do the Banks children have against barley water?

If a centaur druid Wild Shapes into a Giant Elk, do their Charge features stack?

Copycat chess is back

Does a dangling wire really electrocute me if I'm standing in water?

What is GPS' 19 year rollover and does it present a cybersecurity issue?



Why is “Reports” in the sentence below without the article “The”?


Why is “sensor fusion” without “the”?Why does the sentence have the indefinite article?Why isn’t there an article?as separator — why no article?What is onion? Asking without an articlepreposition + Noun without article“Mechanism of toxicity involves…” - why without the definite article?With or without the indefinite article (an)?The definite article before names of professions without earlier referencestart with 'the' or start without article






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}







4















Why is "Reports" in sentence below without "The"?




Reports are coming in that a train has crashed near Birmingham.




This sentence is copied from the book How English Works by Michael Swam and Catherine Walter.



Why my question? Because I think that the plural "Reports" is a group of reports that have something together. It is new about "a train has crashed near Birmingham". For example, "The apples are red." Why not "Apples are red". I think because it is a group of red apples, not mix red, green, blue, etc.










share|improve this question































    4















    Why is "Reports" in sentence below without "The"?




    Reports are coming in that a train has crashed near Birmingham.




    This sentence is copied from the book How English Works by Michael Swam and Catherine Walter.



    Why my question? Because I think that the plural "Reports" is a group of reports that have something together. It is new about "a train has crashed near Birmingham". For example, "The apples are red." Why not "Apples are red". I think because it is a group of red apples, not mix red, green, blue, etc.










    share|improve this question



























      4












      4








      4


      1






      Why is "Reports" in sentence below without "The"?




      Reports are coming in that a train has crashed near Birmingham.




      This sentence is copied from the book How English Works by Michael Swam and Catherine Walter.



      Why my question? Because I think that the plural "Reports" is a group of reports that have something together. It is new about "a train has crashed near Birmingham". For example, "The apples are red." Why not "Apples are red". I think because it is a group of red apples, not mix red, green, blue, etc.










      share|improve this question
















      Why is "Reports" in sentence below without "The"?




      Reports are coming in that a train has crashed near Birmingham.




      This sentence is copied from the book How English Works by Michael Swam and Catherine Walter.



      Why my question? Because I think that the plural "Reports" is a group of reports that have something together. It is new about "a train has crashed near Birmingham". For example, "The apples are red." Why not "Apples are red". I think because it is a group of red apples, not mix red, green, blue, etc.







      articles american-english






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 18 hours ago









      muru

      36929




      36929










      asked yesterday









      b2okb2ok

      361315




      361315






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          14














          Plurals do not require articles. If you use an article, you have a different meaning.




          There are apples in the bowl. The apples are red.




          The previously identified apples are red. Just like when used with a singular, the use of the definite article, the, indicates that you are talking about specific apples.




          Apples are red.




          This is a claim that apples, in general, are red. This is clearly an incorrect statement, as some apples have no noticeable red pigmentation at all. They are green (or, sometimes, more like yellow).




          Apples are falling on my house.




          Now, this isn't a general statement. It's not claiming that all apples in the world are falling your house right now. That would be alarming. It is saying that there are apples falling on your house. Similarly, we might say:




          Reports are coming in that StackExchange is going to shut down.




          This says that some reports are coming in saying that. If there was just one such report, we'd say "a report is coming in...". If we don't want to be precise about numbers, we just say reports.



          I haven't sat down and explored this thoroughly, but it seems to me that a plural without article as the subject of a linking verb (be, look, seem, feel) is a statement in general about that category of item, possibly limited by context, and I suspect the same is true of verbs of state (stative verbs) and generally of verbs of perception (though I don't imagine inanimate objects being subjects of those very often). I'm not sure if there's a general rule for other action verbs, though. That's probably dependent on context. And of course negation changes things. For example,




          Trains aren't running on the West Coast Mainline today.




          That's a general statement. However,




          Trains are running on the West Coast Mainline today.




          That's not; not all trains are running on the West Coast Mainline, after all. However, this might be because the first could be rewritten:




          No trains are running on the West Coast Mainline today.




          Then there's an explicit determiner.



          Essentially, you can consider most plural nouns as having a determiner - either explicit, or implicit. It's working out what the implicit determiner is that's the trick. In your example, it's clearly some. In others, it will be something else.






          share|improve this answer































            6














            Not a native speaker. That being disclaimed, I would say that the reports in this context are general and not specifically known from previous situation. If it'd be only a single report, you'd say "a report is coming..." but since it's multiple instances of it, we can omit the.






            share|improve this answer
























            • "The apples are red" also "not specifically known from the previous situation"

              – b2ok
              yesterday













            • "Reports are coming in ..." means continuous = they are known from the previous situation

              – b2ok
              yesterday






            • 2





              @b2ok Nor would anybody say the apples are red if their existence hadn't been previously established, and some specific apples identified. If all apples, in general, are red, there would be no article at all. (And you can't say that there is a "previous situation" about the reports if you've failed to give that context.)

              – Jason Bassford
              yesterday








            • 1





              @b2ok I don't follow the logic of either of your comments. Are you sure you don't have them backwards?

              – Dawood ibn Kareem
              yesterday











            • @b2ok That's incorrect. If yo say "the apples are red", then I'm assuming that it's a specific subset of apples and not apples in general. If you say "apples are red" I can contradict you by presenting a green apple. In the former case, though, I can't. I may ask "which appples do you refer to", though.

              – Konrad Viltersten
              19 hours ago



















            6














            The important thing here is to differentiate between definite and indefinite. That there's no article in your example sentence shows that "reports" is indefinite. Indefinite plural nouns have no article. It's indefinite because the reader doesn't already know which reports are being referred to. In subsequent sentences, we might expect to see "the reports..." but since this is the first sentence about the topic, the reader has no prior knowledge of the reports.






            share|improve this answer
























              Your Answer








              StackExchange.ready(function() {
              var channelOptions = {
              tags: "".split(" "),
              id: "481"
              };
              initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

              StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
              // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
              if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
              StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
              createEditor();
              });
              }
              else {
              createEditor();
              }
              });

              function createEditor() {
              StackExchange.prepareEditor({
              heartbeatType: 'answer',
              autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
              convertImagesToLinks: false,
              noModals: true,
              showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
              reputationToPostImages: null,
              bindNavPrevention: true,
              postfix: "",
              imageUploader: {
              brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
              contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
              allowUrls: true
              },
              noCode: true, onDemand: true,
              discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
              ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
              });


              }
              });














              draft saved

              draft discarded


















              StackExchange.ready(
              function () {
              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f204351%2fwhy-is-reports-in-the-sentence-below-without-the-article-the%23new-answer', 'question_page');
              }
              );

              Post as a guest















              Required, but never shown

























              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes








              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              14














              Plurals do not require articles. If you use an article, you have a different meaning.




              There are apples in the bowl. The apples are red.




              The previously identified apples are red. Just like when used with a singular, the use of the definite article, the, indicates that you are talking about specific apples.




              Apples are red.




              This is a claim that apples, in general, are red. This is clearly an incorrect statement, as some apples have no noticeable red pigmentation at all. They are green (or, sometimes, more like yellow).




              Apples are falling on my house.




              Now, this isn't a general statement. It's not claiming that all apples in the world are falling your house right now. That would be alarming. It is saying that there are apples falling on your house. Similarly, we might say:




              Reports are coming in that StackExchange is going to shut down.




              This says that some reports are coming in saying that. If there was just one such report, we'd say "a report is coming in...". If we don't want to be precise about numbers, we just say reports.



              I haven't sat down and explored this thoroughly, but it seems to me that a plural without article as the subject of a linking verb (be, look, seem, feel) is a statement in general about that category of item, possibly limited by context, and I suspect the same is true of verbs of state (stative verbs) and generally of verbs of perception (though I don't imagine inanimate objects being subjects of those very often). I'm not sure if there's a general rule for other action verbs, though. That's probably dependent on context. And of course negation changes things. For example,




              Trains aren't running on the West Coast Mainline today.




              That's a general statement. However,




              Trains are running on the West Coast Mainline today.




              That's not; not all trains are running on the West Coast Mainline, after all. However, this might be because the first could be rewritten:




              No trains are running on the West Coast Mainline today.




              Then there's an explicit determiner.



              Essentially, you can consider most plural nouns as having a determiner - either explicit, or implicit. It's working out what the implicit determiner is that's the trick. In your example, it's clearly some. In others, it will be something else.






              share|improve this answer




























                14














                Plurals do not require articles. If you use an article, you have a different meaning.




                There are apples in the bowl. The apples are red.




                The previously identified apples are red. Just like when used with a singular, the use of the definite article, the, indicates that you are talking about specific apples.




                Apples are red.




                This is a claim that apples, in general, are red. This is clearly an incorrect statement, as some apples have no noticeable red pigmentation at all. They are green (or, sometimes, more like yellow).




                Apples are falling on my house.




                Now, this isn't a general statement. It's not claiming that all apples in the world are falling your house right now. That would be alarming. It is saying that there are apples falling on your house. Similarly, we might say:




                Reports are coming in that StackExchange is going to shut down.




                This says that some reports are coming in saying that. If there was just one such report, we'd say "a report is coming in...". If we don't want to be precise about numbers, we just say reports.



                I haven't sat down and explored this thoroughly, but it seems to me that a plural without article as the subject of a linking verb (be, look, seem, feel) is a statement in general about that category of item, possibly limited by context, and I suspect the same is true of verbs of state (stative verbs) and generally of verbs of perception (though I don't imagine inanimate objects being subjects of those very often). I'm not sure if there's a general rule for other action verbs, though. That's probably dependent on context. And of course negation changes things. For example,




                Trains aren't running on the West Coast Mainline today.




                That's a general statement. However,




                Trains are running on the West Coast Mainline today.




                That's not; not all trains are running on the West Coast Mainline, after all. However, this might be because the first could be rewritten:




                No trains are running on the West Coast Mainline today.




                Then there's an explicit determiner.



                Essentially, you can consider most plural nouns as having a determiner - either explicit, or implicit. It's working out what the implicit determiner is that's the trick. In your example, it's clearly some. In others, it will be something else.






                share|improve this answer


























                  14












                  14








                  14







                  Plurals do not require articles. If you use an article, you have a different meaning.




                  There are apples in the bowl. The apples are red.




                  The previously identified apples are red. Just like when used with a singular, the use of the definite article, the, indicates that you are talking about specific apples.




                  Apples are red.




                  This is a claim that apples, in general, are red. This is clearly an incorrect statement, as some apples have no noticeable red pigmentation at all. They are green (or, sometimes, more like yellow).




                  Apples are falling on my house.




                  Now, this isn't a general statement. It's not claiming that all apples in the world are falling your house right now. That would be alarming. It is saying that there are apples falling on your house. Similarly, we might say:




                  Reports are coming in that StackExchange is going to shut down.




                  This says that some reports are coming in saying that. If there was just one such report, we'd say "a report is coming in...". If we don't want to be precise about numbers, we just say reports.



                  I haven't sat down and explored this thoroughly, but it seems to me that a plural without article as the subject of a linking verb (be, look, seem, feel) is a statement in general about that category of item, possibly limited by context, and I suspect the same is true of verbs of state (stative verbs) and generally of verbs of perception (though I don't imagine inanimate objects being subjects of those very often). I'm not sure if there's a general rule for other action verbs, though. That's probably dependent on context. And of course negation changes things. For example,




                  Trains aren't running on the West Coast Mainline today.




                  That's a general statement. However,




                  Trains are running on the West Coast Mainline today.




                  That's not; not all trains are running on the West Coast Mainline, after all. However, this might be because the first could be rewritten:




                  No trains are running on the West Coast Mainline today.




                  Then there's an explicit determiner.



                  Essentially, you can consider most plural nouns as having a determiner - either explicit, or implicit. It's working out what the implicit determiner is that's the trick. In your example, it's clearly some. In others, it will be something else.






                  share|improve this answer













                  Plurals do not require articles. If you use an article, you have a different meaning.




                  There are apples in the bowl. The apples are red.




                  The previously identified apples are red. Just like when used with a singular, the use of the definite article, the, indicates that you are talking about specific apples.




                  Apples are red.




                  This is a claim that apples, in general, are red. This is clearly an incorrect statement, as some apples have no noticeable red pigmentation at all. They are green (or, sometimes, more like yellow).




                  Apples are falling on my house.




                  Now, this isn't a general statement. It's not claiming that all apples in the world are falling your house right now. That would be alarming. It is saying that there are apples falling on your house. Similarly, we might say:




                  Reports are coming in that StackExchange is going to shut down.




                  This says that some reports are coming in saying that. If there was just one such report, we'd say "a report is coming in...". If we don't want to be precise about numbers, we just say reports.



                  I haven't sat down and explored this thoroughly, but it seems to me that a plural without article as the subject of a linking verb (be, look, seem, feel) is a statement in general about that category of item, possibly limited by context, and I suspect the same is true of verbs of state (stative verbs) and generally of verbs of perception (though I don't imagine inanimate objects being subjects of those very often). I'm not sure if there's a general rule for other action verbs, though. That's probably dependent on context. And of course negation changes things. For example,




                  Trains aren't running on the West Coast Mainline today.




                  That's a general statement. However,




                  Trains are running on the West Coast Mainline today.




                  That's not; not all trains are running on the West Coast Mainline, after all. However, this might be because the first could be rewritten:




                  No trains are running on the West Coast Mainline today.




                  Then there's an explicit determiner.



                  Essentially, you can consider most plural nouns as having a determiner - either explicit, or implicit. It's working out what the implicit determiner is that's the trick. In your example, it's clearly some. In others, it will be something else.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered yesterday









                  SamBCSamBC

                  18k2567




                  18k2567

























                      6














                      Not a native speaker. That being disclaimed, I would say that the reports in this context are general and not specifically known from previous situation. If it'd be only a single report, you'd say "a report is coming..." but since it's multiple instances of it, we can omit the.






                      share|improve this answer
























                      • "The apples are red" also "not specifically known from the previous situation"

                        – b2ok
                        yesterday













                      • "Reports are coming in ..." means continuous = they are known from the previous situation

                        – b2ok
                        yesterday






                      • 2





                        @b2ok Nor would anybody say the apples are red if their existence hadn't been previously established, and some specific apples identified. If all apples, in general, are red, there would be no article at all. (And you can't say that there is a "previous situation" about the reports if you've failed to give that context.)

                        – Jason Bassford
                        yesterday








                      • 1





                        @b2ok I don't follow the logic of either of your comments. Are you sure you don't have them backwards?

                        – Dawood ibn Kareem
                        yesterday











                      • @b2ok That's incorrect. If yo say "the apples are red", then I'm assuming that it's a specific subset of apples and not apples in general. If you say "apples are red" I can contradict you by presenting a green apple. In the former case, though, I can't. I may ask "which appples do you refer to", though.

                        – Konrad Viltersten
                        19 hours ago
















                      6














                      Not a native speaker. That being disclaimed, I would say that the reports in this context are general and not specifically known from previous situation. If it'd be only a single report, you'd say "a report is coming..." but since it's multiple instances of it, we can omit the.






                      share|improve this answer
























                      • "The apples are red" also "not specifically known from the previous situation"

                        – b2ok
                        yesterday













                      • "Reports are coming in ..." means continuous = they are known from the previous situation

                        – b2ok
                        yesterday






                      • 2





                        @b2ok Nor would anybody say the apples are red if their existence hadn't been previously established, and some specific apples identified. If all apples, in general, are red, there would be no article at all. (And you can't say that there is a "previous situation" about the reports if you've failed to give that context.)

                        – Jason Bassford
                        yesterday








                      • 1





                        @b2ok I don't follow the logic of either of your comments. Are you sure you don't have them backwards?

                        – Dawood ibn Kareem
                        yesterday











                      • @b2ok That's incorrect. If yo say "the apples are red", then I'm assuming that it's a specific subset of apples and not apples in general. If you say "apples are red" I can contradict you by presenting a green apple. In the former case, though, I can't. I may ask "which appples do you refer to", though.

                        – Konrad Viltersten
                        19 hours ago














                      6












                      6








                      6







                      Not a native speaker. That being disclaimed, I would say that the reports in this context are general and not specifically known from previous situation. If it'd be only a single report, you'd say "a report is coming..." but since it's multiple instances of it, we can omit the.






                      share|improve this answer













                      Not a native speaker. That being disclaimed, I would say that the reports in this context are general and not specifically known from previous situation. If it'd be only a single report, you'd say "a report is coming..." but since it's multiple instances of it, we can omit the.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered yesterday









                      Konrad VilterstenKonrad Viltersten

                      2,09722344




                      2,09722344













                      • "The apples are red" also "not specifically known from the previous situation"

                        – b2ok
                        yesterday













                      • "Reports are coming in ..." means continuous = they are known from the previous situation

                        – b2ok
                        yesterday






                      • 2





                        @b2ok Nor would anybody say the apples are red if their existence hadn't been previously established, and some specific apples identified. If all apples, in general, are red, there would be no article at all. (And you can't say that there is a "previous situation" about the reports if you've failed to give that context.)

                        – Jason Bassford
                        yesterday








                      • 1





                        @b2ok I don't follow the logic of either of your comments. Are you sure you don't have them backwards?

                        – Dawood ibn Kareem
                        yesterday











                      • @b2ok That's incorrect. If yo say "the apples are red", then I'm assuming that it's a specific subset of apples and not apples in general. If you say "apples are red" I can contradict you by presenting a green apple. In the former case, though, I can't. I may ask "which appples do you refer to", though.

                        – Konrad Viltersten
                        19 hours ago



















                      • "The apples are red" also "not specifically known from the previous situation"

                        – b2ok
                        yesterday













                      • "Reports are coming in ..." means continuous = they are known from the previous situation

                        – b2ok
                        yesterday






                      • 2





                        @b2ok Nor would anybody say the apples are red if their existence hadn't been previously established, and some specific apples identified. If all apples, in general, are red, there would be no article at all. (And you can't say that there is a "previous situation" about the reports if you've failed to give that context.)

                        – Jason Bassford
                        yesterday








                      • 1





                        @b2ok I don't follow the logic of either of your comments. Are you sure you don't have them backwards?

                        – Dawood ibn Kareem
                        yesterday











                      • @b2ok That's incorrect. If yo say "the apples are red", then I'm assuming that it's a specific subset of apples and not apples in general. If you say "apples are red" I can contradict you by presenting a green apple. In the former case, though, I can't. I may ask "which appples do you refer to", though.

                        – Konrad Viltersten
                        19 hours ago

















                      "The apples are red" also "not specifically known from the previous situation"

                      – b2ok
                      yesterday







                      "The apples are red" also "not specifically known from the previous situation"

                      – b2ok
                      yesterday















                      "Reports are coming in ..." means continuous = they are known from the previous situation

                      – b2ok
                      yesterday





                      "Reports are coming in ..." means continuous = they are known from the previous situation

                      – b2ok
                      yesterday




                      2




                      2





                      @b2ok Nor would anybody say the apples are red if their existence hadn't been previously established, and some specific apples identified. If all apples, in general, are red, there would be no article at all. (And you can't say that there is a "previous situation" about the reports if you've failed to give that context.)

                      – Jason Bassford
                      yesterday







                      @b2ok Nor would anybody say the apples are red if their existence hadn't been previously established, and some specific apples identified. If all apples, in general, are red, there would be no article at all. (And you can't say that there is a "previous situation" about the reports if you've failed to give that context.)

                      – Jason Bassford
                      yesterday






                      1




                      1





                      @b2ok I don't follow the logic of either of your comments. Are you sure you don't have them backwards?

                      – Dawood ibn Kareem
                      yesterday





                      @b2ok I don't follow the logic of either of your comments. Are you sure you don't have them backwards?

                      – Dawood ibn Kareem
                      yesterday













                      @b2ok That's incorrect. If yo say "the apples are red", then I'm assuming that it's a specific subset of apples and not apples in general. If you say "apples are red" I can contradict you by presenting a green apple. In the former case, though, I can't. I may ask "which appples do you refer to", though.

                      – Konrad Viltersten
                      19 hours ago





                      @b2ok That's incorrect. If yo say "the apples are red", then I'm assuming that it's a specific subset of apples and not apples in general. If you say "apples are red" I can contradict you by presenting a green apple. In the former case, though, I can't. I may ask "which appples do you refer to", though.

                      – Konrad Viltersten
                      19 hours ago











                      6














                      The important thing here is to differentiate between definite and indefinite. That there's no article in your example sentence shows that "reports" is indefinite. Indefinite plural nouns have no article. It's indefinite because the reader doesn't already know which reports are being referred to. In subsequent sentences, we might expect to see "the reports..." but since this is the first sentence about the topic, the reader has no prior knowledge of the reports.






                      share|improve this answer




























                        6














                        The important thing here is to differentiate between definite and indefinite. That there's no article in your example sentence shows that "reports" is indefinite. Indefinite plural nouns have no article. It's indefinite because the reader doesn't already know which reports are being referred to. In subsequent sentences, we might expect to see "the reports..." but since this is the first sentence about the topic, the reader has no prior knowledge of the reports.






                        share|improve this answer


























                          6












                          6








                          6







                          The important thing here is to differentiate between definite and indefinite. That there's no article in your example sentence shows that "reports" is indefinite. Indefinite plural nouns have no article. It's indefinite because the reader doesn't already know which reports are being referred to. In subsequent sentences, we might expect to see "the reports..." but since this is the first sentence about the topic, the reader has no prior knowledge of the reports.






                          share|improve this answer













                          The important thing here is to differentiate between definite and indefinite. That there's no article in your example sentence shows that "reports" is indefinite. Indefinite plural nouns have no article. It's indefinite because the reader doesn't already know which reports are being referred to. In subsequent sentences, we might expect to see "the reports..." but since this is the first sentence about the topic, the reader has no prior knowledge of the reports.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered yesterday









                          Scott SeveranceScott Severance

                          753715




                          753715






























                              draft saved

                              draft discarded




















































                              Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language Learners Stack Exchange!


                              • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                              But avoid



                              • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                              • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                              To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                              draft saved


                              draft discarded














                              StackExchange.ready(
                              function () {
                              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f204351%2fwhy-is-reports-in-the-sentence-below-without-the-article-the%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                              }
                              );

                              Post as a guest















                              Required, but never shown





















































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown

































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown







                              Popular posts from this blog

                              Fairchild Swearingen Metro Inhaltsverzeichnis Geschichte | Innenausstattung | Nutzung | Zwischenfälle...

                              Pilgersdorf Inhaltsverzeichnis Geografie | Geschichte | Bevölkerungsentwicklung | Politik | Kultur...

                              Marineschifffahrtleitung Inhaltsverzeichnis Geschichte | Heutige Organisation der NATO | Nationale und...