Count Nouns
Count Nouns
Count Nouns
1. Count nouns
Plural forms
We usually add –s to make a plural noun:
book > books;
school > schools;
friend > friends
Plural count nouns do not have a determiner when they refer to people or things as
a group:
Computers are very expensive.
Do you sell old books?
2. Uncount nouns
a piece of... pieces of... a bit of... bits of... an item of... items of...
Let me give you a piece of advice.
That’s a useful piece of equipment.
We bought a few bits of furniture for the new apartment.
She had six separate items of luggage.
May I have a white wine. = May I have a [glass of] white wine.
They sell a lot of coffees. = They sell a lot of [different kinds of] coffee.
I prefer white wines to red. = I prefer [different kinds of] white wine to red.
They had over twenty cheeses on sale. = They had over twenty [types of] cheese on sale.
This is an excellent soft cheese. = This [kind of] soft cheese is excellent.
5: Group nouns
Some nouns, like army, refer to groups of people, animals or things, and we can use
them either as singular nouns or as plural nouns.
We can use these group nouns either as singular nouns or as plural nouns:
My family is very dear to me.
I have a large family. They are very dear to me. (= The members of my family…)
The government is very unpopular.
The government are always changing their minds.
The names of many organisations and teams are also group nouns, but they are usually
plural in spoken English:
Barcelona are winning 2-0.
The United Oil Company are putting prices up by 12%.
6: Two-part nouns
A few plural nouns, like binoculars, refer to things that have two parts.
trousers tweezers
To make it clear we are talking about one of these items, we use a pair of …
I need a new pair of spectacles.
I’ve bought a pair of blue jeans.
4. Proper nouns
Names of people, places and organisations are called proper nouns. We spell proper nouns
with a capital letter:
Mohammed Ali; Oxford University,
Birmingham; the United Nations
China;
When we give the names of books, films, plays and paintings we use capital letters for
the nouns, adjectives and verbs in the name:
I have been reading ‘The Old Man and the Sea’.
Beatrix Potter wrote ‘The Tale of Peter Rabbit’
You can see the Mona Lisa in the Louvre.
Sometimes we use a person’s name to refer to something they have created:
Recently a Van Gogh was sold for fifteen million dollars.
We were listening to Mozart.
I’m reading an Agatha Christie.