Difference between revisions of "Language/French/Grammar/Number-differences-between-French-and-English-nouns"

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==Mass nouns==
==Mass nouns==


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.  
A [[Language/English/Grammar/Mass-noun |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.
Many abstract nouns are uncountable, but not all uncountable nouns are abstract. The contrasting term is known as a count noun.



Revision as of 20:55, 26 November 2021

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French Grammar - Number differences between French and English nouns


Some nouns in the singular in English are in the plural in French and vice versa.

Here are some examples:

English singular & French plural

English singular French plural
applause les applaudissements
darkness les ténèbres
sb's funeral les funérailles de qn
hair les cheveux
information des informations, des renseignements
knowledge les connaissances
to make progress faire des progrès
to do research/my research faire des recherches/mes recherches

English plural & French singular

English plural French singular
linguistics la linguistique
economics l'économie
grapes (grape = un grain de raisin) du raisin
physics la physique
pyjamas un pyjama
stairs l'escalier
shorts un short
trousers un pantalon
tights un collant
underpants un slip

Mass nouns

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.

Some mass nouns in French can also be used as count nouns more freely than their English equivalents:


French English
un pain a loaf of bread (NOT *a bread)
un fruit a piece of fruit
un raisin a type of grape

Other Chapters

Table of Contents

Nouns


Determiners


Personal and impersonal pronouns


Adjectives


Adverbs


Numbers, measurements, time and quantifiers


Verb forms


Verb constructions


Verb and participle agreement


Tense


The subjunctive, modal verbs, exclamatives and imperatives


The infinitive


Prepositions


Question formation


Relative clauses


Negation


Conjunctions and other linking constructions