UNIT 21
Grammar:
Noun
Phrases
Countable nouns
Countable nouns have a singular and plural form.
That painting is amazing.
Those paintings are dreadful.
Some countable nouns ...
- have irregular plurals, e.g. person/people, mouse/mice.
- do not change in their plural form, e.g. the sheep is ... , the sheep are ...
With hyphenated countable nouns, we usually form the plural by pluralizing the key word, e.g.
brothers-in-law and over-achievers.
With organizations and groups of people (e.g. group/team/etc), it often makes no difference
whether the verb is singular or plural.
The government is/are not doing anything to help the arts.
With some countable nouns, when we want to refer to a group, we use certain phrases ending in
of. These include: a flock of birds/sheep, a herd of cows/elephants, a pack of cards/dogs, a
bunch of flowers/grapes/keys, a set of encyclopedias/keys
Singular uncountable nouns
Singular uncountable nouns only have a singular form. They only take verbs in the singular.
Is the information reliable?
Singular uncountable nouns include: advice, blood, bread, furniture, hair, information, jewelry,
knowledge, luggage, milk, money, news, permission, respect, water
With singular uncountable nouns, if we want to describe one particular item, we have to use a
phrase ending in of before the noun. Common phrases include: a bar of chocolate/soap, a bit of
help/advice, a blade of grass, a block of concrete, a breath of fresh air, a drop of water, a grain
of salt/sand, a gust of wind, a loaf of bread, a lump of sugar, a piece of bread/information, a
scrap of paper, a sheet of paper, a slice of bread/cheese, a speck of dust/dirt, a spot of ink
Plural uncountable nouns
Plural uncountable nouns only have a plural form. They only take verbs in the plural.
The scissors aren’t on the table.
Plural uncountable nouns include: arms, binoculars, cattle, clothes, congratulations, earnings,
glasses, goods, groceries, jeans, odds, pants, pliers, premises, pyjamas, regards, remains,
savings, scales, scissors, shorts, surroundings, thanks, tights, trousers, valuables
With plural uncountable nouns, we can sometimes use a pair of, usually when we see something
as having two parts/legs/etc., e.g. a pair of binoculars/trousers/scissors/etc.
Watch out
Some uncountable nouns end in -s but are singular, e.g. diabetes, news, physics, politics.
Many nouns are countable with one meaning and uncountable with another meaning.
These include: cake, chicken, chocolate, damage, glass, hair, paper, time, wood, work
The table is made of wood. (uncountable, = the material)
It’s a picture of a local wood. (countable, = a small forest)
Some nouns which are usually uncountable are used as countable nouns in certain
expressions, e.g. a knowledge of, a great help.