Language/English/Grammar/Mass-noun
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A mass noun is a noun (like advice, bread, knowledge, luck, and work) that names things which, when used in English, generally cannot be counted. Many abstract nouns are uncountable, but not all uncountable nouns are abstract. The contrasting term is known as a count noun.
Video - What is a Mass Noun?[edit | edit source]
Videos[edit | edit source]
COMMON, PROPER, COUNT, and MASS NOUNS - ENGLISH ...[edit | edit source]
What are Mass Nouns? - English Grammar lesson - YouTube[edit | edit source]
Other Lessons[edit | edit source]
- Definite Article
- Quantifiers
- Turn an Adjective into an Adverb
- More on Omission
- Actual and actually
- How Some pointers when using Adjectives
- Irregular Verbs
- Count noun
- Nouns
- RELATIVE PRONOUNS
- Adverbs of Degree
- GERUNDS
- Introduce yourself
- Indefinite Article
- Double Object Verbs (Ditransitive verbs)