"Lazypierrot" <
lazyp...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:fb60763f-b651-476e...@googlegroups.com...
> . . . I understand that a battery case is not material. What I would
> like to know is
> whether ***a sheet of stainless steel*** that a battery case is made of
> can be
> referred to as "material". More specifically, although I understand that
> "stainless
> steel" is called "material," but can I call ***the sheet*** of stainless
> steel "material"?
Getting back to basics . . .
1. Any physical stuff may be called material (as distinct from the ideas
embodied
in the material, e.g. the shape, design, dimensions, etc.)
2. Grammar is no help here; (all your variants were grammatically
correct.)
> What I would like to know is whether ***a single sheet of stainless
> steel***
> can be refered to as "material", as in the following sentence.
>
> Creating a cell phone battery case from the material required the finest
> skill.
This is very suitable on two conditions.
1. Earlier in the text, you must specify that a single sheet of stainless
steel
is the only material under discussion.
2. Reword THIS for THE viz.
Creating a cell phone battery case from this material required the finest
skill.
--
Don Phillipson
Carlsbad Springs
(Ottawa, Canada)