At The Supermarket
At The Supermarket
At The Supermarket
AT THE SUPERMARKET
1. Countable Nouns
Countable nouns are easy to recognize. They are things that we can count. For
example: "table". We can count tables. We can have one, two, three or more
tables. Here are some more countable nouns:
My dog is playing.
A dog is an animal.
When a countable noun is singular, we must use a word like a/the/my/this with it:
I like oranges.
2. Uncountable Nouns
Uncountable nouns are substances, concepts etc that we cannot divide into
separate elements. We cannot "count" them. For example, we cannot count "milk".
We can count "bottles of milk" or "litres of milk", but we cannot count "milk" itself.
Here are some more uncountable nouns:
furniture, luggage
money, currency
We do not usually use the indefinite article a/an with uncountable nouns. We
cannot say "an information" or "a music". But we can say a "something" of:
a piece of news
a bottle of water
a grain of rice
Uncountable
money
music
luggage
furniture
electricity
wine
information
advice
travel
work
scenery
When you learn a new word, it's a good idea to learn whether it's countable or
uncountable.
3. Nouns that can be Countable and Uncountable
Sometimes, the same noun can be countable and uncountable, often with a
change of meaning.
COUNTABLE
I see three hairs in my soup!
There are four lights in that house.
There are so many different noises in
the city.
Have you got a paper to read?
(newspaper)
Hand me those student papers.
Our house has seven rooms.
We had a great time at the party.
How many times have I told you no?
UNCOUNTABLE
hair
light
noise
paper
room
time
work
4. Quantifiers
We use quantifiers when we want to give someone information about the number
of something: how much or how many.
Sometimes we use a quantifier in the place of a determiner:
Most children start school at the age of five.
We ate some bread and butter.
We saw lots of birds.
We use these quantifiers with both count and uncountable nouns:
all
any
enough
less
a lot of
more
most
no
none of
some
lots of
heaps of
a load of
loads of
tons of
etc.
each
either
(a) few
fewer
neither
several
hundreds of
thousands of
etc.
(not) much
a bit of
And, particularly with abstract nouns such as time, money, trouble, etc:, we
often use:
a great deal of
a good deal of
Members of groups
You can put a noun after a quantifier when you are talking about members of a
group in general
Two supermarkets*
The supermarket
was closed
The supermarket
wasn't open
I dont think the
supermarket was
open.
Both the
supermarkets were
closed.
Neither of the
supermarkets was
open.
I dont think either of
the supermarkets
was open.
All the
supermarkets were
closed
None of the
supermarkets were
open
I don't think any of
the supermarkets
were open
We often use every to talk about times like days, weeks and years:
When we were children we had holidays at our grandmothers every year.
When we stayed at my grandmothers house we went to the beach every
day.
We visit our daughter every Christmas.
BUT: We do not use a determiner with every and each. We do not say:
The every shop was decorated with flowers.
The each child was given a prize.