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Anonymous Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Is there any rules to realise uncountable nouns and countable nouns

i am so confiused. i want to learn english but i cant realise difrence between uncountable nouns and countable nouns.

if there is a chart for memorise please tell me. otherwise in my language we can count fish, bread. etc

is there any rules to understand uncountabale nouns. please help me.
  

Top answer

Uncountable noun are countable if you use them in a correct sentence: "one, two, three bottles of milk". You can't count bread, but "loafs of bread" are countable. Fish is countable as an animal, but usually not as a food.

  • Uncountable noun are countable if you use them in a correct sentence: "one, two, three bottles of milk".
  • You can't count bread, but "loafs of bread" are countable.
  • Fish is countable as an animal, but usually not as a food.
  • You can buy "three fishes", but you in a meal "there is a lot of fish" Google is your friend.
  • I'm sure it's easy to find many lists of uncountable nouns.
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1 Answers
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Uncountable noun are countable if you use them in a correct sentence: "one, two, three bottles of milk". You can't count bread, but "loafs of bread" are countable. Fish is countable as an animal, but usually not as a food. You can buy "three fishes", but you in a meal "there is a lot of fish"

Google is your friend. I'm sure it's easy to find many lists of uncountable nouns.

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