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Countable and uncountable nouns

* If you find “a”/“an” in front of the word or “s” at the end of a word, this
word must be a countable noun. For examples, when you see “a car” or
“cars”, the word “car” must be countable.

Countable nouns Uncountable nouns

oranges, carrots, onions, bread, lettuce, milk, cheese, rice,

pineapples, pears, bananas, beef, oil, garlic, meat, salt,

sweets, noodles, tomatoes, ice-cream, sugar, pork, food,

mushrooms, grapes, strawberries, water, chicken(meat), butter,

apples, eggs, snacks, potato chips, soup, tea, coffee, money

vegetables, cakes, dollars

Sometimes countable and sometimes uncountable

egg, ice-cream, lettuce, coke, chocolate, chicken,

Words used with countable nouns Words used with uncountable

nouns

many, a few, few (close to zero), much, a little, little (close to

fewer nothing), less

Words used with both countable and uncountable nouns

some, a lot of (=lots of), plenty of, enough, any, more


When we want to count the uncountable nouns, we can put a

phrase in front of the word. See the examples below:

a bar of chocolate, 2 bars of chocolate,

a bottle of milk / juice, three bottles of milk / juice

a carton of milk / juice, 5 cartons of milk / juice

a bowl of rice, a few bowls of rice

* “Milk” and “rice” are uncountable but “carton”, “bottle” and

“bowl” are countable. You cannot say 1 milk, 2 milks but you

can say “1 bottle”, “two bottles”.

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