Do you know when a noun is countable or not? Do you understand the rules, and what that means?
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Question 1 of 3
1. Question
Match the sentence beginnings with the endings.
Sort elements
- those which can be counted.
- those which cannot be counted.
- but we do count ‘a loaf of bread’.
- used with the indefinite article (a or an), do not have plural forms and are used with a single verb form.
- when we mean "a cup of".
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Countable nouns are
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Uncountable nouns are
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We do not count bread
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Uncountable nouns are not
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Coffee can be countable (Would you like a coffee?)
Correct
Incorrect
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Question 2 of 3
2. Question
Match the uses with the determiners or quantifiers.
Sort elements
- a/an, few, a few, many, a large number of, each, every, several
- little, a little, much, a great deal of, a large amount of
- some, any, no, a lot of, lots of, all, plenty of, most
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Countable nouns
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Uncountable nouns
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Both Countable nouns and Uncountable nouns
Correct
Incorrect
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Question 3 of 3
3. Question
Match the sentence beginnings with the endings.
Sort elements
- These have more negative meanings: They mean ‘not much/many’ or ‘not as much/many as desired or expected’
- These have more positive meanings: They mean ‘some’ or ‘more than expected’
- This means ‘a lot of ’ or ‘more than enough’
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Little and few
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A little and a few
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Plenty of
Correct
Incorrect