The document summarizes the differences between countable and uncountable nouns. It shows that countable nouns can take quantifiers like "a/an", "numbers", "some", "a lot of", "very few", whereas uncountable nouns take quantifiers like "some", "a lot of", "very little". It also demonstrates how questions are formed differently depending on whether the noun is countable or uncountable, using quantifiers like "how many" for countable nouns and "how much" for uncountable nouns. The document concludes with homework assignments on studying a lesson from the student book and completing an exercise in the workbook.
The document summarizes the differences between countable and uncountable nouns. It shows that countable nouns can take quantifiers like "a/an", "numbers", "some", "a lot of", "very few", whereas uncountable nouns take quantifiers like "some", "a lot of", "very little". It also demonstrates how questions are formed differently depending on whether the noun is countable or uncountable, using quantifiers like "how many" for countable nouns and "how much" for uncountable nouns. The document concludes with homework assignments on studying a lesson from the student book and completing an exercise in the workbook.
The document summarizes the differences between countable and uncountable nouns. It shows that countable nouns can take quantifiers like "a/an", "numbers", "some", "a lot of", "very few", whereas uncountable nouns take quantifiers like "some", "a lot of", "very little". It also demonstrates how questions are formed differently depending on whether the noun is countable or uncountable, using quantifiers like "how many" for countable nouns and "how much" for uncountable nouns. The document concludes with homework assignments on studying a lesson from the student book and completing an exercise in the workbook.
A/AN – There is AN orange (+) NUMBERS – There are TWO oranges SOME – There are SOME SOME – There is SOME flour oranges A LOT OF – There is A LOT OF flour A LOT OF – There are A LOT OF oranges VERY LITTLE – There is VERY LITTLE VERY FEW – There are flour. We can’t make a cake VERY FEW eggs. We can’t make a cake (-) ANY – There aren’t ANY ANY – There isn’t ANY flour oranges MUCH – There isn’t MUCH flour MANY – There aren’t MANY oranges (¿) How MANY? – How MANY How MUCH? – How MUCH flour is oranges are there? there? MANY – Has your sister got MUCH – Have you got MUCH money? MANY friends?
HOMEWORK
-Study lesson “The Pancake” – Students’ book – Page 29