IELTS Teacher SAJ
Lektor ze społeczności
### **Countable and Uncountable Nouns: A Guide** #### **Countable Nouns** - **Definition**: Countable nouns are items or concepts that can be counted individually. They have both singular and plural forms. - **Examples**: - **Singular**: a cat, an apple, a book, a chair - **Plural**: three cats, two apples, five books, many chairs - **Usage**: - Use **a/an** with singular countable nouns: *a dog, an idea*. - Use numbers and quantifiers like **many, few, several** with plural countable nouns: *many friends, few opportunities*. #### **Uncountable Nouns** - **Definition**: Uncountable nouns represent items or concepts that cannot be counted individually. They usually don't have a plural form. - **Examples**: - Substances: water, sugar, rice, milk - Abstract ideas: information, advice, knowledge, happiness - General categories: furniture, luggage, equipment - **Usage**: - Use **some, a lot of, much, little** with uncountable nouns: *some milk, much information, little time*. - Do not use **a/an** with uncountable nouns: instead of *a water*, say *some water*. #### **Exceptions and Special Cases** - **Plural Uncountable Nouns**: Some nouns are uncountable but have a plural form that refers to a different concept: - **News**: uncountable, but looks plural (*The news is interesting.*) - **Hair**: uncountable when referring to all hair on the head (*Her hair is long.*) but can be countable when referring to individual strands (*I found a hair in my soup.*) - **Substances as Countable Nouns**: Some uncountable nouns can be treated as countable when referring to a type or serving: - **Coffee**: *Would you like two coffees?* (meaning two cups of coffee) - **Pizza**: *We ordered three pizzas.* (meaning three whole pizzas)
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