word usage - So, "Some advice" or "some advices"? Which is correct?
"Some advice" or "some advices" as in "I got some advice / advices for you"? So, Which is correct?
In Oxford Learner's Dictionaries, "advice" is uncountable noun, so "Some advice" is the correct one.
However, googling "some advices" returns 400K results and in fact many formal English articles / news use "some advices" as in this article on Yahoo News: "Real World 101: What Every Graduate Should Know".
Although graduating from college is a great accomplishment which should be recognized, it is not the end. In fact, it is just the beginning of a totally new phase in life which the graduates are unfamiliar with. Below are some advices for the new graduates that are not thought in schools.
So, I think "some advices" could be accepted as an alternative to "some advice" though it is not 100% accurate.
Answer
As noted, advice is uncountable so it takes no plural form. In the following extract from "Oxford dictionaries", however, they hint at a legal/business usage of advice as a countable noun.
Taking and giving advice
The central difference between advice and advise is that the spelling advice, with -ice at the end, is the standard English spelling for the noun, but never for the verb. Advice has two meanings:
guidance or recommendations offered to someone about the best course of action to take in a particular situation: she gave good advice about treating everyone with respect; her help surprised him, but he took her advice.
(in business and legal use) a formal record of a financial agreement or other transaction: cheques and remittance advices were raised in alphabetical order.
Advice is mainly used with the first meaning, and in this meaning it is a mass noun (that is, it has no plural).
The business/legal meaning, however, is a count noun: it has a plural form, advices.
Tip 1: there are just two possible forms for the noun: advice and advices.
Tip 2: when you pronounce advice, the ending rhymes with ice.
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