Article Flowchart: For The More Visually Oriented, This Flowchart Sketches Out The Basic Rules and Basic Questions
Article Flowchart: For The More Visually Oriented, This Flowchart Sketches Out The Basic Rules and Basic Questions
For the more visually oriented, this flowchart sketches out the basic rules and basic questions.
“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?