Count and Non-Count WorksheetsIn these Count and Non-Count Worksheets, students learn to identify count and non-count nouns.They also allow students to memorize the most commonly used examples.Įver wonder about why some words don't use s to make them plural?Use this worksheet to practice proper usage. Traffic and furniture are non-count the word remainsunchanged in plural form. For example, 'I have a lot of furniture in my house,' or, 'This guidebook doesn't include much information about French culture.'With noncount nouns, we can't use the expressions 'a few,' 'many,' 'both,' 'several,' 'one of,' or 'a couple of.' This is simply one of the rules, or quirks, inherent in the English language. To show the quantity of a noncount noun, we use expressions like some, much,less, a lot of, a little of, etc. They have no plural form.Liquids such as coffee or water, abstractions such as love or peace, and collective nouns such as furniture or luggage are all examples of noncount nouns.Noncount nouns cannot be used with the articles a or an. For example, 'I made a new friend today,' or 'That's an interesting idea.'Noncount nouns are nouns that can’t be counted or broken into parts. We can have three trees, two boys, or many ideas.It is possible to use the articles a and an with count nouns, when there is only one of them. Some examples of count nouns include tree, house,boy, girl, country, city, idea, etc. Count nouns are nouns you can count.They exist as individual units, and they can be cut into parts.