count nouns

Count nouns have two forms: singular and plural.

The singular form refers to one person or thing:

a book; a teacher; a wish; an idea

The plural form refers to more than one person or thing:

books; teachers; wishes; ideas

Singular count nouns

Singular count nouns cannot be used alone. They must have a determiner:

the book; that English teacher; a wish; my latest idea

or a quantifier:

some new books; a few teachers; lots of good ideas

or a numeral:

two new books; three wishes

Plural forms:

We usually add –s to make a plural noun:

book > books; school > schools; friend > friends

We add -es to nouns ending in –ss; -ch; -s; -sh; -x

class > classes; watch > watches; gas > gases; wish > wishes; box > boxes

When a noun ends in a consonant and -y we make the plural in -ies...

lady > ladies; country > countries; party > parties

…but if a noun ends in a vowel and -y we simply add -s:

boy > boys; day > days; play > plays

Some common nouns have irregular plurals:

Man > men; woman > women; child > children; foot > feet;
person > people

Plural count nouns do not have a determiner when they refer to people or things as a group:

Computers are very expensive.
Do you sell old books?

Exercise

Comments

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is ''The  soldiers'' a proper noun?

Hello DiVva,

Like other jobs, soldiers  is not a proper noun, they start with capital letters. We have a page and exercises about proper nouns.

Regards,

Stephen Jones
The LearnEnglish Team

can we use ''angry'' as an abstract noun, showing state of some person

Hello DiVva.

Anger  is the noun form of angry.  Try looking it up in our  Cambridge Dictionaries Online  search box, on the right of this page, for some examples of its use.

Regards,

Stephen Jones

The LearnEnglish Team

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