Weather is typically treated as an uncountable noun in English. It is considered a collective concept that cannot be easily quantified into individual units.
Weather is typically considered an uncountable noun because it is used to describe the general atmospheric conditions, rather than individual instances of weather events. We say "the weather is nice today" rather than "one weather, two weathers."
"Lamps" is a countable noun because you can easily quantify and count the number of individual lamps.
"Clothes" is a plural noun and is considered countable. It refers to individual items such as shirts, pants, dresses, etc.
The noun 'Styrofoam' is an uncountable noun as a word for a substance.Some uncountable nouns for substances use a plural form exclusively for 'types of' or 'kinds of''. However, I don't know if there is more than one kind of Styrofoam.
Petrol is typically treated as uncountable in British English, while in American English, it can be countable when referring to specific quantities.
Transport is both countable and uncountable as a noun.
The noun 'steel' is an uncountable (mass) noun, a word for a substance.
Shark is a countable noun.
countable
Countable
The noun 'daytime' is an uncountable noun.
The noun 'animal' is a countable noun. The plural form is animals.
Yes, the noun 'sky' is a countable noun. The plural form 'skies' is a word most often used when referring to the weather or specific atmospheric conditions.The noun 'sky' is an uncountable noun as a word for the atmosphere that surrounds the earth.
Prawn - prawns is the plural - is a countable noun
Pasta is a countable noun
Countable
The word 'violence' is an uncountable noun.