No, "every" is used with singular count nouns or uncountable nouns. For plural count nouns, "each" is used instead.
1. you will identify if is it mass nouns or count nouns by this way: count nouns:nouns that you can count......you will identify that if you can count that thing or noun ex: 5 containers mass nouns:nouns that can not be counted......you will identify it if you can not count that noun like liquids ex: leaves on a tree clouds in the sky
1. they are nouns that can be counted. 2. they named common nouns.
Some non-count nouns that start with Z are:zealzealousnesszestzoologyzymurgy
Bushes is plural so it must be a count noun, uncountable nouns don't have plural forms.
Plant is a count noun because you can count plants such as two geraniums or ten trees. Their beauty or their strength are mass nouns.
You can create 10 sentences with count nouns by using the words many bottles, few bottles, and a few bottles in different sentences. When using count nouns they can be preceded by much.
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female, such as male or female.The noun 'elegance' is a neuternoun, a word for something that has no gender.
Use "there is" for one item. (singular nouns) Use "there is" for non-count items. (non-count nouns) Use "there are" for many items. (plural nouns)
The word stars is a count noun, the plural form for the singular star. A count noun is a word that has both a singular and a plural form.
Count nouns are nouns that can be counted, for example: bed, cat, movie, train, cousin, country. Non-count nouns are nouns that can't be counted, for example: knowledge, weather, electricity, flour, biology.
Nouns that have no plural form are called mass nouns, uncountable nouns, or non-count nouns.