Yes, the term "river" can be countable. For example, you can say "There are five rivers in this region."
Yes, "town" is countable. You can have one town, two towns, three towns, etc.
"Neighborhood" is typically considered countable as it refers to a specific area or community. However, it can also be used in a more abstract or general sense, making it more uncountable.
proper nouns = Helen, Romecommon nouns = table, computer
Examples of compound nouns are:firehousefire alarmfire fighterfire enginestorefrontcountry storeshoe storestoreroomstonewarecornerstonekeystonegravestone
list of countable and uncontable nouns?
The countable nouns are nouns with a singularand a plural form.The uncountable nouns are also called mass nouns.
Countable in math may not mean the same thing as countable in English. Do you remember the Partridge-in-a-Pear-Tree song? The nouns following the numbers are mathematically countable.
chicken,fish,pizza,apple,cheese,maccaroni are examples for countable nouns
[object Object]
You would say "those shops" in English."That" and "those" are both demonstratives.Demonstratives can be either singular or plural."That" is used with uncountable nouns or singular countable nouns."Those" is used with plural countable nouns."Shops" is a plural countable noun.
Pears are countable nouns because they can be counted individually. You can say "one pear," "two pears," and so on. This distinguishes them from uncountable nouns, which cannot be counted in this way.
An is the form of a you use when the word after it starts with a vowel.a car, an apple.An and a are used with singular countable nouns: a girl, an armadilloWe don't put an or a in front of plural or countable nouns because a/an means 'one'.a girls, a milk
Oil is not countable. Uncountable nouns are normally only singular, and we cannot use a/an with them. (NOT a oil, you say a barrel of oil, NOT two oils)
If you are referring to countable nouns, those are nouns that have a plural. Book, girl, school, horse... these all can be counted. Five books. Twenty girls. Three schools. Two horses. But some nouns have no plural. They are called non-countable (or non-count) nouns. "Information" and "research" are two examples.
The noun 'apple' is a countable noun, a word that has a singular and a plural form. The plural noun is 'apples'.A countable noun is a noun for people or things that can be counted; having singular and plural forms.An uncountable noun (also called a mass noun) is noun for a substance or concept that is indivisible into countable units.The noun 'apple' is a countable noun.The noun 'applesauce' is an uncountable noun, a word for a substance.Units of uncountable nouns are expressed by nouns for amounts, measures, or things called partitive nouns; for example, a jar of applesauce, a bowl of applesauce, a cupof applesauce, etc.
A sausage is actually a countable noun. The uncountable nouns are usually things too small to count for example salt, sugar and soil.