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How Much? How Many? Awesome English Level 1 Lesson 6 | Make Better Sentences
Let's learn How Much and How Many. Which question word do we use and when? We will practice with words we learned before too! Let's learn all about countable and uncountable nouns and their quantifiers.
Awesome English will teach you how to make better sentences. Learn to speak better sentences with an American English accent. Learn how to add easy details to sentences so that people can imagine what you are saying. This helps you be a more dynamic speaker. It also raises your fluency level with very little effort.
Get even more help and a free worksheet on Countable and Uncountable nouns here: http://listenandlearnenglish.com/?p=1927
In this English lesson we will learn:
How much vs How Many
A lot, A little, A few
Countable Nouns
Uncountable Nouns
How to tell the difference between countable and uncountable nouns.
Ask questions about how much and how many.
make sentences with words from our other lessons.
Study with me and we will learn some useful patterns to building better sentences and speaking more exciting ideas. Learn to communicate in English effectively without grammar rules and complicated studies. Learn how to make better sentences like a native speaker learns to build sentences. You can do it. You are awesome and I will help you have Awesome English.
Countable and Uncountable nouns are often easy mistakes that language learners can fix. Let’s learn how to quickly know the difference between the two.
Definition
Nouns name different things, for example: cats; dogs; water; or milk. It’s easy when we have one noun, but what if we have more than one? We need to count the nouns. Only, there is one problem . . .
Some nouns can be counted but some cannot be counted. I can count one apple, two apples, one hundred apples. These nouns are countable.
EXAMPLES:
I have one apple.
There are five people.
These are eight butterflies.
What about nouns you can’t count?
I cannot count water and I don’t want to count grains of rice because there’s just so many. They are uncountable, so you just say the noun.
EXAMPLES:
I have water.
I ate rice.
I will pour orange juice.
If you want to count an uncountable noun, you need to add a countable noun to the sentence.
I have two glasses of water.
I ate three bowls of rice.
I bought three jugs of orange juice.
In these examples, glasses, bowls, and jugs are countable nouns used to describe how much of an uncountable noun there is.
QUANTIFIERS
What if you don’t want to count the exact amount of objects? You can use a quantifier, which talks about the general amount of objects.
There are different quantifiers for countable and uncountable nouns.
And… There are so many quantifier from which to choose. Look at some of them:
See the table here http://listenandlearnenglish.com/?p=1927
Uncountable and Countable Nouns with Quantifiers and Examples
Some quantifiers are unique to each category. Some quantifiers can be used with countable or uncountable nouns.
Here is a helpful video teaching you even more about Countable and Uncountable Nouns.
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