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Article Flowchart: For The More Visually Oriented, This Flowchart Sketches Out The Basic Rules and Basic Questions

The document provides information about uncountable nouns and some strategies for determining whether a noun is countable or uncountable. It notes that uncountable nouns cannot be counted and do not take an article, while countable nouns can be pluralized and take articles like "a" or "an". It also discusses how some nouns can have both countable and uncountable meanings depending on context. The best way to determine a noun's countability is by checking a dictionary.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
84 views2 pages

Article Flowchart: For The More Visually Oriented, This Flowchart Sketches Out The Basic Rules and Basic Questions

The document provides information about uncountable nouns and some strategies for determining whether a noun is countable or uncountable. It notes that uncountable nouns cannot be counted and do not take an article, while countable nouns can be pluralized and take articles like "a" or "an". It also discusses how some nouns can have both countable and uncountable meanings depending on context. The best way to determine a noun's countability is by checking a dictionary.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Article flowchart

For the more visually oriented, this flowchart sketches out the basic rules and basic questions.

Some notes about nouns


Uncountable nouns
As the name suggests, uncountable nouns (also called non-count or mass nouns) are things that can not be
counted. They use no article for generic and indefinite reference, and use “the” for definite
reference. Uncountable nouns fall into several categories:

 Abstractions: laughter, information, beauty, love, work, knowledge


 Fields of study: biology, medicine, history, civics, politics (some end in -s but are non-count)
 Recreational activities: football, camping, soccer, dancing (these words often end in -ing)
 Natural phenomena: weather, rain, sunshine, fog, snow (but events are countable: a hurricane, a
blizzard, a tornado)
 Whole groups of similar/identical objects: furniture, luggage, food, money, cash, clothes
 Liquids, gases, solids, and minerals: water, air, gasoline, coffee, wood, iron, lead, boric acid
 Powders and granules: rice, sand, dust, calcium carbonate
 Diseases: cancer, diabetes, schizophrenia (but traumas are countable: a stroke, a heart attack, etc.)

Note: Different languages might classify nouns differently

 “Research” and “information” are good examples of nouns that are non-count in American English
but countable in other languages and other varieties of English.

Strategy: Check a dictionary. A learner’s dictionary will indicate whether the noun is countable or not. A
regular dictionary will give a plural form if the noun is countable. Note: Some nouns have both count and non-
count meanings Some nouns have both count and non-count meanings in everyday usage. Some non-count
nouns have count meanings only for specialists in a particular field who consider distinct varieties of
something that an average person would not differentiate. Non-count meanings follow the rules for non-count
nouns (generic and indefinite reference: no article; definite: “the”); count meanings follow the count rules (a/an
for singular, no article for plural). Can you see the difference between these examples?

 John’s performance on all three exams was exceptional.


 John’s performances of Shakespeare were exceptional.
 To be well educated, you need good instruction.
 To assemble a complicated machine, you need good instructions.

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