Level: beginner
Some nouns in English are uncount nouns. We do not use uncount nouns in the plural and we do not use them with the indefinite article a/an:
We ate a lot of food. (NOT
foods)
We bought some new furniture. (NOTfurnitures)
That's useful information. (NOTa useful information)
We can use some quantifiers with uncount nouns:
He gave me some useful advice.
They gave us a lot of information.
Uncount nouns often refer to:
Substances: food, water, wine, salt, bread, iron
Human feelings or qualities: anger, cruelty, happiness, honesty, pride
Activities: help, sleep, travel, work
Abstract ideas: beauty, death, fun, life
Common uncount nouns
Some common nouns in English like information are uncount nouns even though they have plurals in other languages:
advice | accommodation | baggage | equipment |
furniture | homework | knowledge | luggage |
machinery | money | news | traffic |
Let me give you some advice.
How much luggage have you got?
- Common uncount nouns 1
If we want to make these things countable, we use expressions like:
a piece of ... | a bit of ... | an item of ... |
pieces of ... | bits of ... | items of ... |
Let me give you a piece of advice.
That's a useful piece of equipment.
We bought a few bits of furniture for the new apartment.
She had six separate items of luggage.
However, accommodation, money and traffic cannot be made countable in this way. We need to use other expressions:
I've lived in three flats/apartments. (NOT
bits of accommodation)
Smith received three large sums of money. (NOTpieces of money)
We got stuck in two traffic jams. (NOTpieces of traffic)
- Common uncount nouns 2
- Common uncount nouns 3
Hello,
I am a bit confused about the word "vocabulary".
Is it used as countable or uncountable noun?
If I refer to words, to the process of learning new words, should I use "vocabulary" or "vocabularies"?
E.g.
"Reading is one of the best ways to improve new vocabulary"
Is it right as countable or uncountable noun?
Thanks for help.
Hello User_1,
'vocabulary' can be either countable or uncountable, but in the context you're asking about (meaning 1 on the linked page), it's generally uncountable. Reading is good for 'expanding your vocabulary', 'improving your vocabulary' or 'learning new vocabulary' (but not 'improve new vocabulary').
Sometimes teachers will talk about 'vocabulary items' or 'lexical items', but these are somewhat technical terms that most people wouldn't use. Most will use one of the three phrases I suggested above.
Best wishes,
Kirk
LearnEnglish team
Thanks a lot Kirk, and sorry for my mistake!
I will look at it as uncountable noun.
Sir, I would like to know that the word -vitamin K- is countable or uncountable.
==============
We should eat broccoli that contains vitamin K.
==============
Is that vitamin adjective which describes the word (Noun) K. Could you explain me please, Sir.
Hello JameK,
The word 'vitamin' is countable, but 'Vitamin K' (and all other specific vitamins) is uncountable.
I'd say that the word 'vitamin' in 'vitamin K' is a noun modifier, that is, a noun acting adjectivally.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Thank you Sir.
Dear Team,
Why furniture is uncountable?
How about plant? Why is it countable?
Thank you.
Hi junita,
It's a bit difficult to explain why because the reason is to do with the ways that speakers of English see and understand the world, and the words that they create to talk about the world.
For some reason, it was important for people to have a word to talk about the whole group of chairs, tables and other similar items as a general concept, without considering them as individual things - and that word is "furniture", the uncountable noun. Similarly, for "plant" (countable), for some reason it was important for people to talk about them as individual units, rather than as a general amount.
So I'm afraid I can't fully answer your question, but I hope that helps a bit.
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello there,
I think we can deal with question this way:
'Furniture' is a collection of objects, so it is a 'group of things'
'Plant' is a single thing
So 'furniture' is a bunch of 'countable' objects, and is therefore a 'countable noun'
But 'plant' is a 'single object' and is therefore an 'uncountable noun'. (You cannot 'count' plants.)
Hello Rezafo,
What you say is correct except for your conclusions. As Jonathan said, 'furniture' is uncountable and 'plant' is countable.
All the best,
Kirk
LearnEnglish team
Hello sir ,
Can we say one , two , three information or advice ?
Because I heard many native say that .
Hi g-ssan,
No, because "information" and "advice" are uncountable. If you want to say the number, a countable word such as "piece(s)" or "bit(s)" needs to be added. For example:
I can't explain why you may have heard other people say that, but I can assure you that "one/two/three information" (etc.) is considered incorrect.
I hope that helps.
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Nagie23,
You can find the answer to this sort of question in a good dictionary. A corridor refers to a space inside a larger space, whereas a treadmill is a kind of machine or has a meaning related to that.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Samin,
The correct choice in the first sentence is 'energy' as it is an uncountable noun in this context.
In the second sentence the plural form is correct ('absences') as it refers to multiple instances.
In the third sentence both answers are possible. Generally, we would use the plural ('sicknesses') here but it's possible to use the singular form to mean '...from any (kind of) sickness'.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Samin,
In the first sentence, 'meal' is a count noun. This is because the quantifier 'every' is only used with count nouns. You can also check this in the dictionary -- if you follow the first link, you'll see [ C ] just above the definition. This indicates it is a count noun. ([ U ] is used with uncount nouns.)
'beach' is also a count noun.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Chekytan,
Yes, we can! For example, money is an uncount noun, and we can say the money, my money, this money or whose money. These are all specific determiners.
You can find more examples and exercises on our grammar page on Specific and general determiners.
I hope that helps.
Best wishes,
Jonathan
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Navreet Bhardwaj
Except for 'to' (it should be 'I went home' instead of 'I went
tohome'), yes, that is grammatically correct.All the best
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Ridg Wick,
A count noun is one which can be plural. For example, we can say one chair (singular) but also two chairs, three chairs, a thousand chairs etc (all plural).
An uncount noun has no plural form. We can only talk about quantity, not number. For example, we can say some milk, some more milk, a lot of milk, a glass of milk, a litre of milk etc, and all of these have a singular noun. We do not say
milks.Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi learningenglishhard,
I would say that the verb in that sentence should be plural: '...diversity and inclusion create...'
I don't know the source for the sentence you quoted, but remember that even the most careful writers can make mistakes, especially when a text is edited and changed over time. For example, the text might once have said '...a focus on diversity and inclusion creates...', and then been edited to remove 'a focus on', leaving an ungrammatical verb.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Abfalter Cristian,
'a lot of money' is the correct option here. The opposite is 'little money'. In both cases, 'money' is an uncount noun.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Lal,
You're welcome! All of the sentences you ask about are correct -- good work.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Lal,
In the questions about how much luggage and furniture, the subject of the verb 'have' is 'you', which is why it is correct. The question 'How much furniture is good?' is correct because 'furniture' (like the word 'luggage') is uncount and therefore it takes a singular verb.
Does that make sense?
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hi Ali boroki,
As far as I know, this just how English speakers see wishes, ideas, fun and happiness. I suppose once could say that a wish is count because it is usually for a specific thing and that an idea is similar, but of course you could argue that they are not so concrete and would make more sense as uncount nouns. But that's not how native speakers of English imagine these concepts.
The same is true of 'happiness' and 'fun' -- we just imagine these concepts as being uncountable and so the nouns are uncount.
I expect this may not be a very satisfying answer for you; if so, I'm sorry! On the other hand, this is one of the things that I enjoy about learning other languges -- you come to realise that there are so many different ways of seeing the world.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello Marua,
'Food' is a word that is uncountable in most contexts. The uncountable form is always correct as far as I am aware, but there are some contexts in which we can it it as a countable noun. These are cases when we want to make it clear that we are talking about different types of food.
Your first sentence is referring to whatever food is in the fridge without distinguishing between types so 'food' is correct. Your second sentence is referring to different types of a particular category of food - different types of snack food - so the countable form is appropriate here.
There are many nouns which function in a similar way, such as coffee, time and space.
Peter
The LearnEnglish Team