Countable and Uncountable

1. Countable nouns

Countable nouns can:

  • be counted:​​ 1 apple – 2 apples – 3 apples

  • have both singular and plural forms:​​ child – children, car - cars

  • use a/an with the singular form:​​ a​​ house, a cat, an elephant

  • can use some / any / many / a few:​​ some dogs, any banana, a few books, many people

 

 

2. Uncountable nouns

Uncountable nouns​​ are usually abstract ideas, liquid or mass forms.

Uncountable nouns:​​ 

  • cannot be counted:​​ 3 rices​​ but:​​ some​​ rice/a bowl​​ of rice

  • have only a singular form and followed by a singular verb:​​ water, rice, sand, air, wine, cheese.​​ The​​ water​​ is​​ clear.

  • cannot use a/an:​​ a​​ music,​​ a​​ blood,​​ a​​ furniture,​​ an​​ advice

  • can use some / any / much / a little:​​ some music, any advice​​ a little water, much damage

 

 

3. Nouns ending in -s

Plural nouns​​ are nouns which only have plural forms. They are followed by a plural verb.

 

trousers, clothes, glasses, goods, feelings, jeans, premises, surroundings, thanks, stairs, socks, pyjamas,​​ scales, pants, remains, goods, proceeds, whereabouts, congratulations, overheads, earnings, outskirts, savings, particulars

 

 ‘Where​​ are​​ your trouser?’ ‘They are​​ on the shelf.’

 

Some​​ uncountable nouns end in –s​​ but are uncountable and use a singular verb:

 

mathematics, physics, aerobics, genetics, measles, linguistics, economics, classics, mumps, diabetes, news, thanks, happiness, gymnastics, aerobics, darts, politics, physics, phonetics, statistics, rabies, means, economics

 

 Mathematics​​ is​​ an interesting​​ subject.

 

Plural measurements ending –s take a singular verb:

 Four-hours is​​ a long time to drive without stopping.

 

 

4. Group nouns

Group nouns or collective nouns are nouns which refer to a group of people or things together. They can take either a singular or a plural verb.

 

government, army, company, crew, crowd, data family, group, media, press, public, staff, team, committee, gang, the BBC, the EU, club, audience, class, generation, jury

 

 My​​ family is/are​​ from Minnesota. The​​ team is/are​​ very successful.

 

Some collective nouns​​ only take the plural verb:

 Cattle​​ are microchipped.​​ The people​​ are celebrating.

 The police​​ always arrive quickly.

 

 

5. Irregular plurals

Some countable nouns have irregular plural forms:

 

change in form:

child – children

ox -​​ oxen

man – men

woman – women

tooth – teeth

goose – geese

foot - feet

mouse – mice

louse – lice​​ 

person – people

no change in form:

fish – fish

aircraft – aircraft

cod – cod

deer – deer

fruit – fruit

sheep – sheep

series – series

species - species

 

 

Sometimes, the spelling of a plural noun is irregular:

 

Change

Example

change -f to -v

knife – knives

life – lives

wife – wives

half – halves

wolf – wolves

loaf – loaves

leaf – leaves

shelf-shelves

calf – calves

elf - elves

hoof - hooves

no change

cliff​​ – cliffs

chief – chiefs

cuff – cuffs

roof - roofs

ends in -o

potato – potatoes

tomato – tomatoes

volcano – volcanoes

buffalo – buffaloes

embargo – embargoes

hero – heroes

mosquito – mosquitoes

zero - zeroes

change –a to -ae

alumna – alumnae

antenna -​​ antennae

change –us to -i

cactus – cacti

nucleus – nuclei

focus – foci

fungus – fungi

octopus – octopi

radius – radii

stimulus – stimuli

syllabus - syllabi

change –is to -es

analysis – analyses

crisis – crises

thesis – theses

oasis – oases

diagnosis –​​ diagnoses

basis – bases

ellipsis – ellipses

emphasis – emphases

hypothesis – hypotheses

neurosis – neuroses

paralysis – paralyses

parenthesis – parentheses

synthesis - syntheses

change –on to –a

phenomenon – phenomena

criterion - criteria

change –um to​​ -a

datum – data

medium – media

bacterium – bacteria

addendum – addenda

curriculum – curricula

memorandum – memoranda

millennium – millennia

stratum – strata

symposium - symposia

change –x to -ces

appendix – appendices

index – indices

matrix - matrices

 

 

6. Counting the uncountable​​ 

We can count uncountable things by using the following expressions:

 

a bag of flour

a bit of bread

a bunch of flowers

a cup of tea

a piece of news

a pool of water

a glass of coca cola

a bottle of wine

a grain of truth​​ 

a tub of butter​​ 

a scrap of​​ 

a spoonful of medicine

a loaf of bread

a can of beer

a drop of blood

a jar of jam

items of clothing

a bar of chocolate

pieces of furniture

a box of cereal

a roll of toilet paper

a tube of toothpaste

a portion of meat

a block of cheese

a sheet of paper

a blade of grass

a spot of ink​​ 

a slice of cake

a block of ice

a kilo of fruit

a lump of fat

a speck of dirt

 

 

7. Common uncountable nouns

Here’s a list of common uncountable nouns. Study the list carefully.

 

advice

age​​ 

anger

baggage

bread

beauty​​ 

behaviour

blood

concrete

company

concern

rubbish

traffic

work

growth

hair

health

homework

information

knowledge

justice

air

damage

duty

education

electricity

equipment

evidence

experience

faith

food

fun

furniture

travel

weather

love

luck

luggage

music

machinery

money

paper

 

 

8. Quantifiers used with countable nouns

a couple of

a number of​​ 

another of

both (of)

each (of)

either (of)

every

neither (of)

the entire

the whole (of)

(a) few (of)

half (of)

many (of)several (of)

 

9. Quantifiers​​ used with singular uncountable nouns

an amount of a great deal of​​  a little (of) much (of)

 

 

10. Quantifiers used with all nouns

all (of) a lot of lots of

all (of) any (of) enough (of)

more (of) most (of) no

none (of) plenty of some (of)

 

 

11.​​ Subject verb agreement

Under the previous points, we already discussed some of the interesting features of subject-verb agreement. Here are some more things worth knowing.

 

We use a singular verb after:

  • everyone / everybody / everything

  • words beginning​​ with any- / some- / no-​​ 

  • any of / each of / either of / neither of / none of / the number of + plural noun

  • any of / none of / the majority of / a lot of / plenty of / all (of) / some (of) + uncountable noun

  • each / every + singular noun

  • common phrases connected by ‘and’ (fish and chips / R & D)

  • X per cent of + plural nouns

 

We use the plural verb after:

  • any of / each of / either of / neither of / none of / the number of + plural noun​​ (Singular verb is preferred! See above.)

  • the number of + plural noun

  • plural​​ forms of measurements and quantities (50 pounds, thirty metres)

  • two joint subjects (Jack and Jill / a book and a pen)

  • after ‘per cent’

  • Subject connected with ‘either … or …’ and ‘neither … nor …’

 

 

12. Change of meaning

Some words change their meaning depending on the countable or the uncountable form.

 

Countable:

a paper = newspaper

a wood = a forest

an experience = a particular situation

a coffee = a cup of coffee

a help = a helping person

a hair = one piece

a work = a work of art

an exercise = a task

a​​ tea = a cup of tea

a chicken = the whole chicken to eat

cheeses = various kinds

Uncountable:

paper = the material

wood = the material

experience = in general

coffee = liquid

help = help in general

hair = all the hair on the had

work = in general

exercise =​​ physical exercise in general

tea = the liquid

chicken = the meat

cheese = the food