What are they?
In English, nouns can be countable or uncountable.
Countable Nouns
These are nouns that you can count as individual items.
Examples: apple, book, chair, dog, student
You can say: "one apple," "two apples," "three apples..."
They have both a singular (book) and a plural (books) form.
Uncountable Nouns
These are nouns (like liquids, materials, or ideas) that you cannot count.
Examples: water, rice, music, information, advice
You can't say: "one water," "two waters."
They usually only have a singular form (you can't say "rices" or "musics").
How to Count Uncountables
To count them, we use 'counters' or 'containers'.
a bottle of water
a cup of tea
a grain of rice
a piece of advice
Countable vs. Uncountable
Here is a quick comparison table to help you remember the rules.
| Feature | Countable | Uncountable |
|---|---|---|
| Can be counted? | Yes (1, 2, 3...) | No |
| Has a plural form? | Yes (apple/apples) | No (we don't say 'rices') |
| Use with 'a' or 'an'? | Yes (an apple) | No (we don't say 'a water') |
| Use with 'some'? | Yes (some apples) | Yes (some water) |
| Use with 'many'? | Yes (How many apples?) | No |
| Use with 'much'? | No | Yes (How much water?) |
Visual Examples
Look at these examples to understand the difference better!
✓ Countable Nouns
✗ Uncountable Nouns
Sentence Examples
• I have three cats.
• She bought a new phone.
• How many students are there?
• There are a few chairs in the room.
• I need some water.
• He gave me good advice.
• How much sugar do you want?
• There is a little milk left.
• a glass of water
• two cups of coffee
• a piece of advice
• three slices of bread
Test Your Knowledge!
Complete the exercises below and click "Check Answers" to see your score.