This document provides examples of using countable and uncountable nouns with affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences. It shows the different structures used with countable nouns like "carrot" in the singular and plural compared to uncountable nouns like "carrot juice." It also demonstrates question and quantity structures like "How many/much" and quantity expressions like "a lot of/lots of, few/little, too many/much."
This document provides examples of using countable and uncountable nouns with affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences. It shows the different structures used with countable nouns like "carrot" in the singular and plural compared to uncountable nouns like "carrot juice." It also demonstrates question and quantity structures like "How many/much" and quantity expressions like "a lot of/lots of, few/little, too many/much."
This document provides examples of using countable and uncountable nouns with affirmative, negative, and interrogative sentences. It shows the different structures used with countable nouns like "carrot" in the singular and plural compared to uncountable nouns like "carrot juice." It also demonstrates question and quantity structures like "How many/much" and quantity expressions like "a lot of/lots of, few/little, too many/much."
Singular Plural Affirmative There is a carrot. There are some carrots. There is some carrot juice. Negative There isn’t a carrot. There aren’t any carrots. There isn’t any carrot juice. Interrogative Is there a carrot? Are there any carrots? Is there any carrot juice?
Countable Nouns Uncountable Nouns
How many apples are there in the fridge? How much cheese is there in the fridge?
There are too many apples. There is too much cheese.
There are a lot of/lots of apples. There is a lot of/lots of cheese.
There aren’t many apples. There isn’t much cheese.
There are a few/some apples. There is a little/some cheese.