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.
Instructiuons: organize the nouns with their respective column as comments.
-
-
DOLLAR
|
FURNITURE
|
TRAVEL
|
TABLE
|
MONEY
|
BOTTLE
|
WINE
|
MUSIC
|
JOB
|
BATTERY
|
WORK
|
JOURNEY
|
a) COUNTABLE b) UNCOUNTABLE
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