Noun Singular and Plural Nouns
Noun Singular and Plural Nouns
Noun Singular and Plural Nouns
Usually, the first page of a grammar book tells you about nouns. Nouns give names of concrete or
abstract things in our lives. As babies learn "mom," "dad," or "milk" as their first word, nouns
should be the first topic when you study a foreign language.
bottle – bottles
cup – cups
pencil – pencils
desk – desks
sticker – stickers
window – windows
box – boxes
watch – watches
moss – mosses
bus – buses
wolf – wolves
wife – wives
leaf – leaves
life – lives
child – children
woman – women
man – men
mouse – mice
goose – geese
sheep – sheep
deer – deer
series – series
species – species
pen, computer, bottle, spoon, desk, cup, television, chair, shoe, finger, flower, camera, stick,
balloon, book, table, comb, etc.
pens, computers, bottles, spoons, desks, cups, televisions, chairs, shoes, fingers, flowers,
cameras, sticks, balloons, books, tables, combs, etc.
Work with expressions such as (a few, few, many, some, every, each, these, and the number of).
a few pens, a few computers, many bottles, some spoons, every desk, each cup, these
televisions, the number of chairs, a few shoes, a few fingers, many flowers, some cameras, every
stick, each balloon, these books, the number of tables, many combs, etc.
a pen, the computer, a bottle, the spoon, a desk, the cup, a television, the chair, a shoe, the
finger, a flower, the camera, a stick, the balloon, a book, the table, a comb, etc.
Do NOT work with much (for example, you would never say much pens or much computers).
Non-count nouns
Cannot be counted. They usually express a group or a type.
water, wood, ice, air, oxygen, English, Spanish, traffic, furniture, milk, wine, sugar, rice, meat,
flour, soccer, sunshine, etc.
Work both with and without an article (a, an, or the), depending on the context of the sentence.
Sugar is sweet.
The sunshine is beautiful.
I drink milk.
He eats rice.
We watch soccer together.
The wood is burning.
Work with expressions such as (some, any, enough, this, that, and much).
Do NOT work with expressions such as (these, those, every, each, either, or neither).
[Quiz 2.1]
wine, student, pen, water, wind, milk, computer, furniture, cup, rice, box, watch, potato, wood
Possessive Nouns
Possessive nouns are used to indicate ownership.
John's book
Kerry's car
Grandma's mirror
If two people own one thing, add the apostrophe and s to the second person only.
If two people own separate things, add the apostrophe and s for each person.