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'Revision' might be countable or uncountable. I am a little bit confused.

lukas
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3 Answers3

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When revision means a change, it can be countable, as in make a few revisions to a report.

When it means examining something so it can be changed, then it can be both: a system in need of revision AND a revision of standards.

Finally, when it means learning for an exam, it is always uncountable.

Irene
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    http://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/revision – Manjima Jan 17 '12 at 19:55
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    'Revisions of Standards' is a common expression referring to the several "revisions" published from time to time. Here it means published issues of revised standards. – Kris Jan 18 '12 at 06:03
  • @Irene If learning for the exam meaning of revision is always uncountable how can I say that I have read a paper for exam more then once and pointed out on more then one? – speedyGonzales Jan 18 '12 at 13:09
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    @speedyGonzales: You can say "It's advisable to do some revision before the exam" but not "It's advisable to do a* revision before the exam". – Irene Jan 18 '12 at 13:57
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Like most derived nouns, revision can refer to a number of things. In the case of revise (the verb that revision is derived from), at least the following senses can be distinguished:

  1. Revision can refer to the process of revising: Some revision was necessary in Chapter 5.
  2. Revision can refer to 1 or more events of revising: There have been six revisions so far.
  3. Revision can refer to 1 or more products of revising : This is a revision; I want the original.

(2) and (3) can be combined: I have all six revisions in my collection.

Only in sense (1) is revision a mass noun; in the other two senses it's a count noun.

John Lawler
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Revision may be used plural e.g revisions; but singular form revision may also denote a set of changes. So, at least it is safe to use plural form if you are talking about several sets of "change(s)". E.g:

The plan underwent constant revisions.

On the other hand, with the meaning "study" or "review", you may use revision singular as in

I have to do some history revision tonight

Mustafa
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    I see your first example as incorrect, with the following two forms preferable to it: "The plan underwent constant revision", "The plan underwent multiple revisions". – James Waldby - jwpat7 Jan 17 '12 at 22:55
  • @jwpat, thank you. is this because of "constant"? As far as I know "constant" has a sense of "repeatedly". – Mustafa Jan 18 '12 at 07:36
  • I am confused. Wold you check OED and longman – Mustafa Jan 18 '12 at 07:58
  • As you note, OALD [which should not be indicated by "OED"] uses the word repeatedly, meaning recurring, within its definition of constant. To replace my previous comment, let me say that constant need not imply repeatedly, nor vice versa; ie we can have constancy with or without repetition and repetition with or without constancy. – James Waldby - jwpat7 Jan 18 '12 at 09:04