While I was listening to a Tamil song, I thought it was melody at its very best.
My sentence is grammatically correct, isn't it? I mean "at" is the preposition that I need to use in this context, and "melody" is an uncountable noun. Am I right?
If you're using "melody" as an abstract noun, the way we might use "music" or "art," then the sentence is grammatically correct. We don't usually refer to "melody" that way.
If you're using "melody" as an abstract noun, the way we might use "music" or "art," then the sentence is grammatically correct. We don't usually refer to "melody" that way.
Yes! When we say "It's melody at its very best," I think it's an abstract noun. When we say "It's a haunting melody," it's a countable noun. This is my understanding.