The noun 'typhoon' is a count noun, the plural form is 'typhoons'.
There can be one typhoon, several typhoons, or a series of typhoons.
Electricity is typically treated as a mass noun, as it refers to a general concept or form of energy rather than individual, countable units. You can say "There is a lot of electricity in the air," but not "I have three electricities."
A partitive noun (also called a noun counter) is a noun used to count or quantify a mass (uncountable) noun such as ice cream.Some examples of partitive nouns for ice cream are a scoop of ice cream, a pint of ice cream, a bowl of ice cream, etc.
No, "mass" is a singular noun. The plural form of "mass" is "masses."
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.
"Weather" is typically considered a non-count noun in English. It is used to talk about the general condition of the atmosphere, rather than individual instances of it. For example, you would say "The weather is nice today," rather than "I see three weathers."
Perfume can be considered both a count noun and a mass noun. As a count noun, it refers to individual bottles or types of perfume. As a mass noun, it refers to the substance or concept of perfume in general.
The noun 'table' is a count noun: one table, two tables.
A count noun is a noun for something that can be counted; a noun with a singular and plural form.A mass (uncountable) noun is a word for something that can't be counted, words for substances, aggregates, activities, concepts, and gerunds.A compound noun is a word made up of two or more words that form a word with a meaning of its own. There are three types of compound nouns:closed (bathtub)hyphenated (fifty-five)open (bus stop)A compound noun can be a count or a mass noun; for example:tennis shoe (tennis is a mass noun, shoe is a count noun)basketball (basket is a count noun, ball is a count noun)airplane (air is a mass noun, plane is a count noun)
The noun wallet is a count noun, the plural form is wallets.
No, the noun 'faculty' is a count noun, a word with a singular and a plural form. The plural form of the noun is 'faculties'.
No, the noun 'health' is a mass (uncountable) noun, a word for a concept.
The noun 'bush' is a count noun; the plural form is bushes. Example:We planted four rose bushes.
No,It is a Mass Noun. Mass nouns are nouns the can't be counted.Examples:water bloodsand grass
Yes, the noun typhoon is a concrete noun, a word for something that can be seen, felt, and measured.
The noun 'drama' is a count noun; for example: The movie is advertised as a drama. Her life is one long series of dramas.
Whether time is a count noun or a mass noun depends on how you use the word.When we use the word time to mean minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, and years, it is a mass noun. "How much timedoes it take to boil an egg?"When we use the word time to mean incidences of events, it is a count noun. "I saw that movie six times!"
The noun 'decision' is a count noun; the plural form is decisions.Example: You have two decisions to make, do you want to go and can you afford to go.