Countable and Uncountable Nouns use
Countable nouns are nouns we can count one by one: one apple, two books. Uncountable nouns are nouns usually seen as a mass, substance, material, abstract idea, or collective whole: water, rice, furniture, information, advice. This topic helps you choose the correct a/an, the, some, any, many, much, a few, a little, and the correct verb form.
Countable and Uncountable Nouns Form
Countable nouns have singular and plural forms. Uncountable nouns do not usually have a plural form, are not used with a/an, and usually take a singular verb.
Countable: a book → books / an apple → apples
Uncountable: milk, rice, money, information, furniture, advice
Countable and Uncountable Nouns Rule
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Before a singular countable noun, we usually need a determiner: for example, an article (a/an/the), a possessive (my, your, his, her, our, their), a demonstrative (this, that), or another determiner.
✅ I need a chair.✅ The chair by the window is broken.✅ My phone is in the bag.❌ I need chair.
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With plural nouns and uncountable nouns, we do not use a/an. When we speak in general, the noun is often used without an article. When we mean something specific, we often use the.
✅ Cars are expensive. (= cars in general)✅ The cars outside are ours. (= specific cars)✅ I drink coffee. (= coffee in general)✅ The coffee on the table is cold. (= specific coffee)
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We do not usually use a/an with uncountable nouns. They usually take a singular verb.
✅ Money is important.✅ Research takes time.✅ The news is good.
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Some is usually used in affirmative sentences, and any is more common in questions and negatives. But we can also use some in questions when we offer, ask for, or expect the answer “yes”.
✅ I bought some apples.✅ We need some sugar.✅ Do you have any apples?✅ Is there any sugar?✅ Would you like some tea?✅ Can I have some water?
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Use many / a few / few with countable nouns, and much / a little / little with uncountable nouns. In ordinary affirmative sentences, a lot of / lots of is often more natural than many / much.
✅ There are many people here.✅ I have a few ideas. (= some, enough)✅ I have few ideas. (= not many, not enough)✅ There isn’t much time.✅ Add a little salt. (= some, enough)✅ We have little money left. (= not enough)✅ She has a lot of friends.✅ We did a lot of work.
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To ask about quantity, use How many...? with countable nouns and How much...? with uncountable nouns.
✅ How many books do you have?✅ How much water do we need?
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To “count” an uncountable noun, use a unit, a container, or a ready-made phrase: a piece of, a bit of, a bottle of, a cup of, a loaf of, a slice of.
✅ a piece of advice✅ two pieces of news✅ a loaf of bread✅ three cups of coffee✅ two bottles of water
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Some words that may be countable in other languages are usually uncountable in English: advice, information, furniture, luggage, news, research, homework, equipment, traffic, progress, knowledge.
✅ some information✅ a piece of advice✅ some news✅ a lot of equipment❌ informations❌ advices
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Some nouns can be both countable and uncountable. The meaning changes depending on the context.
✅ I don’t drink much coffee. (= the drink in general)✅ We’d like two coffees. (= two cups)✅ I’d like some cake. (= cake as food)✅ She baked two cakes. (= two whole cakes)✅ She has long hair. (= hair in general)✅ There is a hair in my soup. (= one strand)✅ I don’t have much free time this week. (= time in general)✅ I go to the gym three times a week. (= number of times)✅ I need some paper. (= material to write on)✅ I bought a paper. (= a newspaper/document)✅ I saw some glass near the window. (= material / broken glass)✅ Can I have a glass of juice? (= a drinking container)✅ There isn’t much room in the car. (= space)✅ There are five rooms in this house. (= parts of a house)✅ I had trouble finding work. (= employment)✅ There are many works of art here. (= creations)
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Some nouns look like plural nouns and are usually used only in that form: trousers, scissors, glasses, binoculars. To count them, we often use a pair of.
✅ My trousers are too long.✅ These scissors are sharp.✅ I bought a pair of trousers.✅ She needs two pairs of glasses.
Countable and Uncountable Nouns Common mistakes
Common mistakes: leaving a singular countable noun without a word before it, using a/an with an uncountable noun, making an uncountable noun plural, choosing the wrong quantity word, or mixing up general and specific meaning.