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Countable Nouns Summary

The document discusses different types of nouns: countable nouns which can be counted like pens, dogs, bottles; uncountable nouns which cannot be counted like milk, music, furniture; and proper nouns which are names like John, London, Ford. It provides examples of countable and uncountable nouns and explains the rules for using articles, plurals, and quantifiers with different nouns. Countable nouns can be singular or plural while uncountable nouns are usually singular and proper nouns always start with a capital letter.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
272 views3 pages

Countable Nouns Summary

The document discusses different types of nouns: countable nouns which can be counted like pens, dogs, bottles; uncountable nouns which cannot be counted like milk, music, furniture; and proper nouns which are names like John, London, Ford. It provides examples of countable and uncountable nouns and explains the rules for using articles, plurals, and quantifiers with different nouns. Countable nouns can be singular or plural while uncountable nouns are usually singular and proper nouns always start with a capital letter.

Uploaded by

sakerah
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Countable Nouns

Countable nouns are easy to recognize. They are things that we can count. For example:
"pen". We can count pens. We can have one, two, three or more pens. Here are some more
countable nouns:

• dog, cat, animal, man, person


• bottle, box, litre
• coin, note, dollar
• cup, plate, fork
• table, chair, suitcase, bag

Countable nouns can be singular or plural:

• My dog is playing.
• My dogs are hungry.

We can use the indefinite article a/an with countable nouns:

• A dog is an animal.

When a countable noun is singular, we must use a word like a/the/my/this with it:

• I want an orange. (not I want orange.)


• Where is my bottle? (not Where is bottle?)

When a countable noun is plural, we can use it alone:

• I like oranges.
• Bottles can break.

We can use some and any with countable nouns:

• I've got some dollars.


• Have you got any pens?

We can use a few and many with countable nouns:

• I've got a few dollars.


• I haven't got many pens.

"People" is countable. "People" is the plural


of "person". We can count people:

• There is one person here.

• There are three people here.


Uncountable Nouns
Uncountable nouns are substances, concepts etc that we cannot divide into separate elements.
We cannot "count" them. For example, we cannot count "milk". We can count "bottles of
milk" or "litres of milk", but we cannot count "milk" itself. Here are some more uncountable
nouns:

• music, art, love, happiness


• advice, information, news
• furniture, luggage
• rice, sugar, butter, water
• electricity, gas, power
• money, currency

We usually treat uncountable nouns as singular. We use a singular verb. For example:

• This news is very important.


• Your luggage looks heavy.

We do not usually use the indefinite article a/an with uncountable nouns. We cannot say "an
information" or "a music". But we can say a something of:

• a piece of news
• a bottle of water
• a grain of rice

We can use some and any with uncountable nouns:

• I've got some money.


• Have you got any rice?

We can use a little and much with uncountable nouns:

• I've got a little money.


• I haven't got much rice.

Examples of countable and uncountable nouns:

Countable Uncountable
dollar money
song music
suitcase luggage
table furniture
battery electricity
bottle wine
report information
job work
Proper Nouns (Names)
A proper noun is the special word (or name) that we use for a person, place or organization,
like John, Marie, London, France or Sony. A name is a noun, but a very special noun - a
proper noun. Proper nouns have special rules.

common noun proper noun


man, boy John
woman, girl Mary
country, town England, London
company Ford, Sony
shop, restaurant Maceys, McDonalds
month, day of the week January, Sunday
book, film War & Peace, Titanic

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