This document distinguishes between countable and uncountable nouns. Countable nouns can be counted and take singular and plural forms, while uncountable nouns cannot be counted and use measures or quantifiers instead of numbers. It provides examples of countable nouns like table and computer that use a/an and plurals, and uncountable nouns like sugar and water that do not use a/an or plurals and instead use measures or quantifiers like cup, glasses, grams, ounces, liters, and tbsp.
This document distinguishes between countable and uncountable nouns. Countable nouns can be counted and take singular and plural forms, while uncountable nouns cannot be counted and use measures or quantifiers instead of numbers. It provides examples of countable nouns like table and computer that use a/an and plurals, and uncountable nouns like sugar and water that do not use a/an or plurals and instead use measures or quantifiers like cup, glasses, grams, ounces, liters, and tbsp.
This document distinguishes between countable and uncountable nouns. Countable nouns can be counted and take singular and plural forms, while uncountable nouns cannot be counted and use measures or quantifiers instead of numbers. It provides examples of countable nouns like table and computer that use a/an and plurals, and uncountable nouns like sugar and water that do not use a/an or plurals and instead use measures or quantifiers like cup, glasses, grams, ounces, liters, and tbsp.