An uncountable noun, often called a mass noun, represents things that cannot be counted as individual units. They are treated as a single mass or concept.
Unlike countable nouns, uncountable nouns do not have a plural form and are not typically used with numbers or indefinite articles like ‘a’ or ‘an’.
Uncountable nouns often refer to materials, liquids, gases, abstract ideas, and general qualities. When referring to a specific quantity, we use partitive nouns or quantifiers.
For example, instead of ‘two waters’, we say ‘two bottles of water’ or ‘two glasses of water’.
Understanding uncountable nouns is crucial for correct grammar, especially with verb agreement. Uncountable nouns always take a singular verb.
Correct: The information is useful.
Incorrect: The information are useful.
A common challenge is distinguishing between countable and uncountable nouns, as some words can function as both depending on context. For instance, ‘hair’ is often uncountable (‘She has long hair’), but can be countable when referring to individual strands (‘There are three hairs in my soup’).
Common examples include: money, furniture, luggage, knowledge, music, news, progress, homework.
Generally, no. They do not have a plural form. We use quantifiers like ‘much’, ‘little’, ‘some’, ‘a lot of’ instead of ‘many’ or ‘few’.
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