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Part 3 Nouns and Noun Groups

Singular and Plural, Count and Noncount Nouns

AKA

Count nouns = countable nouns

Noncount nouns = uncountable or uncount nouns

Examples

In English, my name means hope.

In Spanish, it means too many letters.

It means sadness, it means waiting.

(Sandra Cisneros, The House on Mango Street)

Definition

Nouns in English can be classified as proper nouns and common nouns. Proper nouns are the names of specific things (people, places, products, languages, etc.) and are written with a capital letter. Common nouns are everything else.

This is a useful distinction, but for MLLs, it is important to further distinguish between two types of nouns: count nouns and noncount nouns. Consider the bolded nouns in the examples above:

We can say my name but not just name.

We say hope but not the hope.

We say many letters but not much letters.

We can say sadness but not easily sadnesses.

We often say in English, but we only talk about Englishes in technical linguistic contexts (e.g. there are different Englishes spoken in the US and the UK).

In the context of the sentences above, we can classify the nouns as follows:

Singular

Plural

Count

name

letters

Noncount

English

Spanish

hope

sadness

N/A

Count nouns represent things that can be separated and counted – we can count names, letters, books, languages, students, trees, and people. Think about count nouns as a bundle of pencils.

Noncount nouns represent things that can’t be separated and counted because they don’t have a clear boundary – think about noncount nouns as water that flows and fills its container, rather than bottles that can be counted. We can’t easily count air, music, happiness, grass, health, knowledge, or information.

Form

There is nothing in the spelling or sound of the noun itself that helps you know it’s count or noncount. However, in the context of noun groups and clauses, count and noncount nouns have these properties:

Property

Count nouns

Noncount nouns

Articles

Use a/an with singular nouns

Do not use a/an with singular nouns

Plural

Plural form

No plural form

Determiners

Singular nouns must have a determiner

Singular nouns do not need a determiner

Quantifiers

many, (a) few, each, every, a number of

much, (a) little, a large amount of

Here are some examples of these properties. Recall that an asterisk (*) indicates an unacceptable form.

Property

Count nouns

Noncount nouns

Articles

a name, an idea, a person

*a sadness, *an information

Plural

names, ideas, people

*sadnesses, *informations

Determiners

*name is Esperanza

*I have idea

It means sadness

I have information

Quantifiers

many ideas, each name, a number of people

a little sadness, too much information, a large amount of water

One easy way that proficient users of English can test for countability is to ask how many or how much?

How many + count noun (how many names? how many ideas? how many people?)

How much + noncount noun (how much information? how much water?)

Careful!

Many noncount nouns have countable forms with a slightly different meaning. We can call these “double nouns.” Often, the noncount form is the abstract idea, and the count form means different types or specific examples of the noun. For example:

Noncount

Count

I don’t have time.

I took the quiz three times.

She doesn’t have any experience.

My vacation was a great experience.

People are afraid of change.

We made some changes to the kitchen.

Freedom of speech is a right.

You are going to give a speech.

Function

Count nouns are more common since they are used for concrete things. Linguists have identified key categories that make noncount nouns easier to remember:

Food (butter, bread, meat, fish, chicken)

Liquids (coffee, tea, water, milk, oil)

Ideas (honesty, faith, grammar)

Nature (lightning, rain, scenery)

Groups (furniture, equipment, food, vocabulary)

Source: K. Folse, Clear Grammar 1, 2nd edition (2010). University of Michigan Press.

Certain suffixes (word endings) are associated with noncount nouns, although there are inevitably exceptions:

Suffix

Examples (noncount)

Exceptions (count)

work

homework, work, coursework

a framework, a network, a work of art

-age

courage, luggage, baggage, garbage

a garage

-edge

knowledge

-ice

ice, advice, juice, practice

-ware

hardware, software, silverware

-th

health, wealth, strength, truth, youth

a youth (=a young person), a myth

-ance/ence

-ness

-(s/t)ure

-(i)ty/cy

chance, tolerance, competence

happiness, hopelessness

moisture, closure

honesty, cruelty, gravity

a chance (=opportunity), a measure

-ing

reading, smoking, drinking

-fare

welfare, warfare

Source: Caplan, 2012, p. 92, adapted from Hinkel, 2004, p. 106

Further Reading

Count nouns (LearnEnglish)

Uncount nouns (LearnEnglish)

Common problems with count and uncount nouns (LearnEnglish)