The noun 'fish' is a count and a non-count noun, depending on context.
The noun 'fish' is a non-count noun as a word for a food substance.
The noun 'fish' can be used in the plural for two or more individual creatures. Both 'fish' and 'fishes' are accepted forms of this plural.
Examples:
We are having fish for dinner. (non-count noun)
The truck is here with the shipment of fish. (non-count noun)
Look at all the fish in the pond. (plural)
Look at all the fishes in the pond. (plural)
Yes, the noun 'fish' is a common noun, a general word for any fish of any kind.
The word 'fish' is also a verb: fish, fishes, fishing, fished.
The noun earthquake is a count noun. There can be an earthquake or a series of earthquakes.
The word "pizza" is a count noun. As a count noun: We ordered four pizzas. I ate an entire pizza. We shared a small pizza.
The noun 'viewer' is a countnoun, the plural form is viewers. Example:This program has millions of viewers.
The noun 'pollock' can be used as a non-count noun with no plural form, or a count noun. The plural form of the count noun is pollocks. Both are accepted forms.
The noun humidity is a mass (non-count) noun, there is no plural form.
No, the noun anger is a non-count noun. Although some non-count nouns have a plural form for 'kinds of' or 'types of', anger is not one of them. There are also a category of non-count food substance nouns, like fish or rabbit that the plural form is used for the individual living creatures. Anger is not one of them.
It is a count noun.
A compound that is composed of a non-count noun and a count noun is earthquake.The noun earth is a substance, a non-count noun. The noun quake is singular, the plural form is quakes.Some others are:air conditionercornflakedust clothhelpmatehockey puckmilkshakesandboxwaterwheelweatherman
The noun rust is a non-count noun. Units of rust are worded as 'spots of rust' or 'patches of rust'
The noun information is a non-count noun with no plural form. The noun information is an aggregate noun, a wordrepresenting an indefinite number of things.
The noun vocabulary is a count noun; the plural form is vocabularies.
Yes, the noun 'serenity' is a non-count noun, a word or a quality or state of peacefulness.
Yes, the noun 'serenity' is a non-count noun, a word or a quality or state of peacefulness.
The noun peas is the plural form for the singular noun pea, a count noun.
No, not an irregular plural. Like the noun fish, the noun swordfish is both a count and a non-count noun, depending on use. The noun fish (and swordfish) is a non-count noun as a word for a substance, a food. The noun fish (and swordfish) is a count noun for a creature living is the sea (or fresh water if applicable). A regular plural is a noun that forms the plural by adding -s or -es to the end of the word. An irregular plural is a noun that forms the plural in some other way (child, children; foot, feet; man, men; etc.) The noun fish (and swordfish) forms the plural, fishes (and swordfishes) by adding -es to the end of the word; a regular plural. Example use for count and non-count: Our group caught three swordfishes. We have enough swordfish to feed the whole neighborhood.
The noun coat is a count noun: one coat, two coats.
The noun humor is a non-count noun; you can count the jokes or the pratfalls but you can't count the humor.