SOFFY
Oat is a singular or a plural noun? and how can I recognize if a noun is singular or plural? I have a lot of difficulties about recognizing if a noun is singular or plural, specially singular nouns, like: bred, out, outmeal
2016年3月27日 21:05
回答 · 4
PS "oatmeal" is an uncountable noun. The Oxford online dictionary defines it as a "mass noun" http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/oatmeal "I will buy (some) oatmeal in the shop." "oatmeals" would be wrong.
2016年3月27日
Here are some clues: a) uncountable nouns can exist without any article e.g. "Love is in the air". However, many uncountable nouns can also be used as countable nouns e.g. "The love of my life" "A love which will last forever" b) uncountable nouns are singular, so if you see a plural -s at the end, it is a countable noun (or an uncountable noun used as a countable one, like "love" above). c) These determiners only appear with countable nouns : a, an, many, those, these, few, a few, another, other d) These determiners only appear with uncountable nouns : much, little, a little. Because many uncountable words can also be used as countable nouns, it's really important to focus on the meaning. Articles and other determiners are never random or conventional - they always reflect the meaning. Think about the difference between "love" in my three examples. Each option was correct because I was expressing something different about "love" each time.
2016年3月27日
Bred is the past tense of breed. Oatmeal is a singular noun (breakfast) Oat = singular; oats = plura
2016年3月27日
Oat is a singular noun and oats is plural.
2016年3月27日
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