'hair' can be a count noun ('There's a hair in my soup!'), but it's usually an uncount noun ('I've got curly black hair').
When 'hair' is an uncount noun, the correct pronoun is 'it': 'I like having short hair but it's not easy to have it' or 'She loves her hair, it's short and curly'.
I have a toddler. He is learning to walk. He is so cute. I do play with him daily. he is innocent and attractive. Every one will fall in love with him at first sight. He has black short hair.
He waits for me till I reach home from workplace. I miss him a lot while I'm out of the home. I buy some chocolates for him while going to home. I feed him the chocolates. He takes some of the biscuit pieces and feed me. what an adorable kid he is :) :)
Please correct, if wrote wrong sentences. Thank you.
Thanks for your text -- writing often is the best way to improve your writing. If you have a specific question about a specific word or phrase in a sentence, please feel free to ask us, but I'm afraid that we otherwise don't provide the service of correcting our users' texts.
Hello French Spring
'hair' can be a count noun ('There's a hair in my soup!'), but it's usually an uncount noun ('I've got curly black hair').
When 'hair' is an uncount noun, the correct pronoun is 'it': 'I like having short hair but it's not easy to have it' or 'She loves her hair, it's short and curly'.
All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Timothy
Thanks for your text -- writing often is the best way to improve your writing. If you have a specific question about a specific word or phrase in a sentence, please feel free to ask us, but I'm afraid that we otherwise don't provide the service of correcting our users' texts.
All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team