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Basic English grammar – countable nouns, uncountable nouns

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countable nouns uncountable nouns

In this English grammar tutorial for people starting to learn English, teacher Stuart explains all you need to know about countable nouns uncountable nouns, and how we use ‘some’ and ‘any’.

Basically, countable nouns are things we can count – apple, orange, knife, fork, ball, bat. Therefore, we can say one apple, one orange, two knives, three forks, etc.

Uncountable nouns are nouns we can NOT count – beer, milk, sand, chocolate. We can’t say one sand or two sands. With uncountable nouns we usually use ‘some’, so we say ‘some sand’. Or, we can say a grain of sand, a can of beer, a carton of milk, etc.

Here is another grammar lesson for you to study.

I also have some English courses on curious.com. Take a look at them please.

Please leave a comment and share the video with your friends

Filed Under: A1 Elementary, A2 (pre-intermediate), Grammar, Video Tagged With: basic english, countable nouns, english a1, english grammar, uncountable nouns

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