Other

What are Countables and Uncountables nouns?

What are Countables and Uncountables nouns?

Nouns can be countable or uncountable. Countable nouns can be counted, e.g. an apple, two apples, three apples, etc. Uncountable nouns cannot be counted, e.g. air, rice, water, etc.

What is countable noun and examples?

Countable Noun Examples Anything that can be counted, whether singular – a dog, a house, a friend, etc. or plural – a few books, lots of oranges, etc. is a countable noun. Notice that singular verbs are used with singular countable nouns, while plural verbs are used with plural countable nouns.

What is many and much?

Use much if the noun is non-countable (e.g., water, sand). Use many if the noun is countable (e.g., oranges, children). For example: I don’t have much money. They own many houses.

What are the 10 uncountable nouns?

Uncountable Nouns

  • music, art, love, happiness.
  • advice, information, news.
  • furniture, luggage.
  • rice, sugar, butter, water.
  • electricity, gas, power.
  • money, currency.

What are 10 examples of countable nouns?

Countable Nouns

  • dog, cat, animal, man, person.
  • bottle, box, litre.
  • coin, note, dollar.
  • cup, plate, fork.
  • table, chair, suitcase, bag.

What are the example of collective nouns?

Examples of this type of collective noun are: crowd, government, team, family, audience, committee, gang, staff, band, orchestra, choir and police. Collective nouns can also refer to things. Examples are pair, bundle, and bunch. Finally, collective nouns can refer to animals, birds, fish or insects.

Is it lots or lot’s?

are correct. a lot of (3 separate words) and lots of, (two separate words) mean the same thing, and we use them before nouns to mean ‘a large number or amount of’. We never write ‘alot of’ or ‘a lots of’.

What are 20 uncountable nouns?