NOUNS COUNTABLE UNCOUNTABLE SINGULAR PLURAL honey.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
COUNTABLES UNCOUNTABLES COUNTABLES - UNCOUNTABLES COUNTABLES - UNCOUNTABLES Countable nouns are nouns which can be counted and can be in the singular.
Advertisements

Plurals of nouns.
PLURALS MORE THAN ONE THING. + -s a car a cassette a lamp a hat a cup two cars five cassettes four lamps two hats three cups.
Plural and Singular Nouns
Singular and Plural Nouns
Singular and Plural Nouns
The rules of regular and irregular Plural Nouns
REVISION ON. Countable nouns are nouns which can be counted and can be in the singular or the plural. If it is singular we use a /an before the noun.
Plural and Singular Nouns By Project LA Activity Adapted by Cheryl M. Hamilton.
Ms. Suthiya Mano.  A plural form of a noun names more than one. It usually ends with s or es.
Plural Form of the Nouns Множественное число имен существительных.
PLURAL Tea Tamm 2005.
Plurals of Countable and Uncountable Nouns.
Singular & Plural Nouns
Plural noun forms The plural form of most nouns is created simply by adding the letter s. more than.
Singular and Plural Nouns
Plural and Singular Nouns Project LA Activity Plural Nouns  A plural form of a noun names more than one. It usually ends with s or es.
What's the plural of...? wolf baby brush foot tomato bus LEARN PLAY.
Plural nouns forms. Множина іменників
Inglês Countable and Uncountable Nouns. Inglês Countable and Uncountable Nouns Articles are a type of noun modifier that precedes a noun. There are two.
The Noun.
Nouns Countable (plural, singular) Uncountable (only singular)
Unit 3: “People, places, customs and traditions of my country” Miss Valeria Barrera Alarcón 7th Graders.
Nouns. A noun is a word that names a person, place or a thing. Examples: girl (person), outside (place), baseball (thing)
Plural of a noun is usually: + s a flower  some flowers -ES after –S, -SH, -CH, -X bus  buses dish  dishes church  churches box  boxes.
Plural and Singular Nouns Nouns  A plural form of a noun names more than one. It usually ends with s or es.  A singular form of a noun names just one.
SINGULAR AND PLURALS FOR GRADE THREE &FOUR
Singular and Plural One and More.
COUNTABLE AND UNCOUNTABLE NOUNS
NOUNS 2010.
LABELS AND LISTS OF THINGS
NOUNS Войцеховская Наталья Владимировна,
Al-Rahma Experimentally School Prepared By : Dalia Alatayka
HOW TO FORM PLURAL NOUNS Adapted from:
NOUNS.
DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS SINGULAR - PLURAL NOUNS
COUNTABLES UNCOUNTABLES
COUNTABLE/UNCOUNTABLE
Rayat Shikshan Sanstha, Satara. Kanya Vidyalaya, Pimpri Waghere Pune.
plural form of noun множина іменника
Plurals.
Plural and Singular Nouns
Plural and Singular Nouns
Plurals Orthography.
SINGULAR AND PLURAL Flower(s) /Bus(es).
Singular and Plural One and More.
Plurals.
Plural and Singular Nouns
Plural and Singular Nouns
Plural and Singular Nouns
The noun.
Plural and Singular Nouns
Plural and Singular Nouns
Plural and Singular Nouns
Plural and Singular Nouns
Plural and Singular Nouns
How to make the plural of nouns
Plural vs singular.
Plurals.
Plural and Singular Nouns
A noun is a word that names
Plural and Singular Nouns
FORMING PLURALS Most nouns Nouns ending in ss, sh, ch, x
Plural and Singular Nouns
A / AN and PLURALS.
Chapter 7 Regular and Irregular Nouns
Singular and Plural One and More.
Plural and Singular Nouns
Plural and Singular Nouns
Plural and Singular Nouns
Presentation transcript:

NOUNS COUNTABLE UNCOUNTABLE SINGULAR PLURAL honey

Most nouns form their plural by adding -s one dog two dogs

Nouns ending in -s, -ss, -sh, -ch, -x, -o, take -es in the plural one box three boxes BUT some nouns ending in -o take only -s radio-radios piano-pianos photo-photos rhino-rhinos hippo-hippos video-videos

Nouns ending in a vowel+ y take only-s in the plural a boy four boys a day-days a toy-toys a joy-joys

Nouns ending in a consonant +y, drop the -y and take -ies in the plural a strawberry two strawberries a baby-babies a lady-ladies a cherry-cherries

Nouns ending in -f or -ef, drop -f or -ef and take -ves in plural a wolf three wolves BUT some nouns ending in -f or -ef take only -s (крыша) roof-roofs giraffe-giraffes (скала) cliff-cliffs chief-chiefs belief-beliefs handkerchief-handkerchiefs

Irregular Plurals a child- children a man – men a woman-women a goose-geese a tooth- teeth a foot- feet an ox- oxen a mouse- mice a louse-lice a deer-deer a trout-trout a salmon-salmon a sheep-sheep a swine-swine a means-means

UNCOUNTABLE NOUNS cheese, butter, meat, salt, pepper, bacon, bread, chocolate, honey, jam, etc. coffee, milk, water, tea, wine, lemonade, petrol, oil, etc. beauty, love, happiness, etc. gold, iron, silver, wood, paper, etc. food liquids materials abstract nouns hair, money, news, advice, snow, furniture, weather, etc. others

REMEMBER Some uncountable nouns become countable with numerals before them hair BUT: two hairs fish BUT: three fishes

PRONUNCIATION [ s] when the noun ends in a(n) [f],[k], [p], [t] or [Ѳ]. cliffs, books, shops, cats, myths [iz] when the noun ends in a(n)[s], [ks], [∫], [t∫], [d3 ], [z] or[3]. buses, foxes, torches, bridges when the noun ends in any other sound. rooms, boys, pears, leaves [z]

WRITE THE PLURAL lemons buses peaches cherries roofs foxes glasses keys pianos potatoes balls books sheep babies children KEY: 1.lemon- 2.bus- 3.peach- 4.cherry- 5.roof- 6.fox- 7.glass- 8.key- 9.piano- 10.potato- 11.ball- 12.book- 13.sheep- 14.baby- 15.child- 16. green leaf- 17.old lady- 18. radio- 19.ox- 20. tall woman- 21.knife- 22.toy- 23.policeman- 24.raspberry- 25.sandwich- 26.mouse- 27.photo- 28.cliff- 29.watch- 30.thief- green leaves old ladies radios oxen tall women knives toys policemen raspberries sandwiches mice photos cliffs watches thieves KEY:

TRANSLATE THE NOUNS 1.lemon- 2.bus- 3.peach- 4.cherry- 5.roof- 6.fox- 7.glass- 8.key- 9.piano- 10.potato- 11.ball- 12.book- 13.sheep- 14.baby- 15.child- 16. green leaf- 17.old lady- 18. radio- 19.ox- 20. tall woman- 21.knife- 22.toy- 23.policeman- 24.raspberry- 25.sandwich- 26.mouse- 27.photo- 28.cliff- 29.watch- 30.thief-

Использованные ресурсы: 1.Jenny Dooley, Virginia Evans.Grammar way. Express Publishing