An uncountable (mass) noun is a word for something that you cannot count, such as substances or concepts. Some examples are:
Mass nouns are 'counted' in 'units of', such as a grain of sand, a cup of rice, a piece of information, etc.
Music is a singular, uncountable noun.
The noun 'buffalo' is an uncountable noun, used as both singular and plural.There are three accepted plural forms of the noun buffalo:buffalo (an uncountable noun)buffalosbuffaloes
The noun 'homelessness' is a singular, uncountable noun (it has no plural form).
The noun 'shoe' is a countable noun, the plural form is shoes.A countable noun is a noun that has both a singular and a plural form.An uncountable noun is a singular noun that has no plural form (such as education or oxygen) or a plural noun that has no singular form (such as news or clothes).
Glycerol is singular. The noun glycerol is an uncountable (mass) noun, a word for a substance.
The word copyright is a singular uncountable noun.
No, the noun 'clothes' is a plural uncountable noun, a word for wearing apparel.The singular noun for wearing apparel is the gerund 'clothing' (the present participle of the verb to clothe), a singular uncountable noun.The singular form of the noun 'clothes' is cloth, a word for fabric not wearing apparel.
The noun 'dew' is a singular, uncountable noun; a word for a substance. The noun 'dew' has no plural form.
The noun 'animal' is a countable noun. The plural form is animals.
The word information is a mass or uncountable noun which, in most cases, take a singular verb.
The noun 'police' is a plural, uncountable noun; a form of uncountable (mass) noun called an aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts; aggregate nouns have no singular form.
No, the noun 'alms' is a plural uncountable noun, it has no singular form.