The noun 'rice' is an uncountable noun (mass noun), a word for a food substance. Units of rice are expressed as grains of rice, cups of rice, bags of rice, etc.
Plural forms for some substances are reserved for 'kinds of' or 'types of' such as 'a dish of two rices' means two types of rice used, basmati and wild.
The noun 'rice' is a concrete noun, a word for a physical substance.
An abstract noun is a word for something that can't be experienced by any of the five physical senses; something that can't be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched.
The word 'rice' is also a verb: rice, rices, ricing, riced.
rice is a noun cause it a thing
What type of noun is suite?
Yes
The noun 'steel' is an uncountable (mass) noun, a word for a substance.
It is countable because the singular or plural can be preceded by a number (one river, three rivers).
The noun 'hill' is a countable noun. The plural form is 'hills'.
Yes
Prawn - prawns is the plural - is a countable noun
The noun 'steel' is an uncountable (mass) noun, a word for a substance.
It is countable because the singular or plural can be preceded by a number (one river, three rivers).
The noun 'hydrogen' is a mass noun (an uncountable noun) as a word for a substance.
The noun 'electricity' is a mass noun, a word for something that is indivisible into countable units.
The noun 'steel' is an uncountable (mass) noun, a word for a substance.
Rice is not a countable noun (rice grains are) so the question does not make sense.
No, a mass noun is an alternate term for an uncountable noun.The noun 'jar' is a countable noun: one jar, a dozen jars.
The noun 'hill' is a countable noun. The plural form is 'hills'.
The countable nouns are nouns with a singularand a plural form.The uncountable nouns are also called mass nouns.
Shark is a countable noun.
No, the noun 'counter' is not a mass noun; the noun 'counter' is a countable noun.Examples:We're installing new kitchen counters.There are electronic counters at the entrance and the exits.
The noun 'grammar' is a countable noun as a word for a textbook of rules for language.The noun 'grammar' is an uncountable (mass) noun as a word for the set of rules that describe the structure of a language and control the way that sentences are formed.