Countable vs. Uncountable Nouns - Countable Nouns - Engelsk (SF) - NDLA

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Countable vs. Uncountable Nouns

Skrive av Sonja Nygaard Joki, Karin D. Løken og Per Lysvåg.
Sist oppdatert 21.10.2022

Countable Nouns

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Nouns which refer to things we can count are countable.

The plural of a countable noun is formed by adding the ending (e)s:
Stamp-stamps, temperature- temperatures, idea- ideas, refugee-refugees, church-churches

If the noun ends in a –y with a consonant in front, the -y is turned into -ie in the plural:
Country-countries, territory-territories. But: day- days

These nouns with an -o at the end have es in the plural: cargo-cargoes, domino-dominoes, echo-echoes, embargo-embargoes, hero-heroes, potato-potatoes, tomato-tomatoes, torpedo-torpedoes, veto-vetoes.