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The word 'monies' is the plural form for 'money'; both are uncountable nouns. You count the dollars, cents, pounds, or pence but it's all money. The plural is used for more than one source or kind of money, and again, you count the sources or kinds but you don't count the category monies.

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12y ago
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7y ago

The uncountable noun 'money' is a type of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts.

The plural noun 'monies' is also an uncountable noun as a word for funding from resources, or for different types of money (a combination of currencies).

In language, Money works like an abstract quality.

Compare to heat:

You cannot count heat.

You can determinate multiple temperatures or prices,

and count degrees or Dollars.

Also you can count kinds of money (cash, digital money, debts...) or heat (convection heat, exhaust heat, summer heat...).

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10y ago

The noun 'salary' is a countablenoun; the plural form is salaries. Example:

I thought I made a good salary but it takes two salaries to keep a roof over our heads.

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Q: Is salary countable or uncountable
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