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some of his most characteristic work or some of his most characteristic works?

 
 
Reply Mon 15 Oct, 2018 08:06 am
I am a Korean English teacher. I am teaching about Monet.
But I have encountered a grammatically strange expression like the following first sentence.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1551703/Cataracts-the-key-to-Monets-blurry-style.html
Monet suffered from cataracts for much of his later life.
During that time, he produced some of his most characteristic work.
During that time, he produced some of his most characteristic works.

I think that in the sentence above, the word “work” must be changed into “works.”
Am I wrong or is the original incorrect?
Could you please explain which is correct or incorrect?
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InfraBlue
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Reply Mon 15 Oct, 2018 10:56 am
@suwon kim,
The writer is using "work" in the general, uncountable sense, some of which was produced during that time.

"Some works" would have referred to the individual, countable works he produced.

Both are grammatical with different meanings.
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