1.to be desired or approved of: "a good quality of life"
2.having the qualities required for a particular role: "the schools here are good"
a noun
1.that which is morally right; righteousness: "a mysterious balance of good and evil" 2.benefit or advantage to someone or something: he convinces his father to use his genius for the good of mankind"
or an adverb.
1.well:informal"my mother could never cook this good"
Go ahead and start an argument over this.
This post was edited by Spunky at September 9, 2024 7:07 AM MDT
There is a site called grammarly.com or quillbot.com that will answer all of your grammar related questions. Or of course, you can wait for Randy D or Stu to help you out. Correcting grammar is not really my thing.
But no, you did not buy a clothes, you bought a piece of clothing. But you can certainly buy a canned good.
This post was edited by my2cents at September 8, 2024 8:09 PM MDT
Apparently, you didn't notice that although you put the word "good" in your search, the examples you copied all show the word "goods." You can't buy one good. You can buy one item but you can't buy one "good." But feel free to continue arguing as it points out how little you know about grammar, even when it's YOUR OWN example.