Articlel before Word ' Fisch '
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Hmmm, I think we do the samething in English too. Interesting question.
1) I like (or enjoy) eating fish.
You are not eating a fish or the specific fish in front of you right now...so you don't use ein or der.
2) We have fresh fish with rice today.
I am assuming that we have more than one fish (so we can't use ein) and they are all fresh (no specific fish, so no der).
That's how I look at these sentences. Hopefully that helps.
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That's right, Grace. German (like English) can have bare noun phrases, in other words nouns without any articles. The semantics are as you've described them - generic, rather than specific.Like English, German doesn't like this with singular count nouns (book, chair, computer, etc.) Only plural count nouns (books, chairs, computers) or mass nouns (cotton, water, fish, meat, bread, rice...) work here.