Countable & Uncountable Nouns — Much vs Many | English1to5.com
📦Noun Types

Countable & Uncountable Nouns — Much vs Many Rules for Kids

Some nouns you can COUNT: 1 book, 2 books, 3 books. Some you CAN’T count: water, sugar, rice — you can’t say ‘1 water, 2 waters’! Knowing the difference helps you choose between much/many, less/fewer, and a/an/some.

Updated: June 8, 2026 · ⏱️ 15 min · Page 3/23 · ⭐⭐ Grade 3-5

📦 Nouns📖 10 Sentences✏️ 15 Fill-Blanks⚠️ 4 Mistakes❓ 12 Quiz🤓 3 Facts

✅ Countable Nouns

book/books
apple/apples
student/students
car/cars
idea/ideas
rupee/rupees
roti/rotis
friend/friends
question/questions
samosa/samosas
chapati/chapatis
pen/pens
child/children
match/matches
egg/eggs

🚫 Uncountable Nouns

water
milk
rice
sugar
salt
flour (atta)
oil
butter
bread
tea
coffee
money
information
homework
furniture
luggage
advice
news
knowledge
weather

📋 Rules

RuleCountableUncountable
Articlesa/an book, the book❌ NO a/an! ✅ some water, the water
Much / Manymany books, a few booksmuch water, a little water
How much/manyHow many books?How much water?
Some / Anysome books, any books?some water, any water?
Less / Fewerfewer booksless water

🔄 Making Uncountable → Countable

watera glass of water, a bottle of water
ricea plate of rice, a bag of rice
advicea piece of advice
breada slice of bread, a loaf of bread
informationa piece of information
furniturea piece of furniture
teaa cup of tea
sugara spoon of sugar
luggagea piece of luggage
newsa piece of news

📖 Read These Sentences Aloud!

  • Aarav has many books but not much free time to read them.
  • Mummy asked: ‘How much rice do you want? And how many rotis?’
  • The teacher said: ‘I’ll give you one piece of advice — study daily!’
  • Priya has less homework today but fewer friends to play with.
  • Can I have some water? There isn’t any juice left.
  • ‘How much money does this cost?’ asked Rahul at the shop.
  • The kitchen has a lot of furniture — a table, chairs, and a cupboard.
  • We don’t have much sugar left — only a little in the jar.
  • There are fewer students today because many are sick.
  • Grandma packed a lot of food: rice, dal, rotis, and pickles!

🇮🇳 Hindi Comparison

Hindi doesn’t distinguish countable/uncountable the same way! ‘दो पानी’ makes sense in Hindi conversation, but ‘two waters’ is wrong in English. That’s why Indian kids say ‘Give me one water’ ❌ instead of ‘Give me a glass of water’ ✅.

✏️ Fill in the Blank (15 Questions)

1How _____ (much/many) books do you have?
Can you count books? Yes → use…
2There isn’t _____ (much/many) milk left.
Can you count milk? No → use…
3She gave me good _____ (advice/advices).
Can you say ‘2 advices’? No!
4I have _____ (much/many) homework today.
Can you say ‘3 homeworks’? No!
5Aarav ate _____ (a few/a little) samosas.
Can you count samosas? Yes → few
6Add _____ (less/fewer) sugar to my chai.
Can you count sugar grains individually? No
7We need _____ (less/fewer) chairs in the room.
Can you count chairs? Yes → fewer
8Can I have _____ (a/some) water please?
Water is uncountable — no ‘a’ !
9She packed two _____ (luggage/pieces of luggage).
Luggage is uncountable — need ‘pieces of’
10How _____ (much/many) time do we have left?
Time is uncountable → much
11Priya has _____ (many/much) friends at school.
Friends = countable → many
12There is too _____ (much/many) noise outside.
Noise = uncountable → much
13Aarav needs _____ (a few/a little) more practice.
Practice = uncountable → little
14The shop has _____ (less/fewer) customers today.
Customers = countable → fewer
15Give me a _____ of bread please.
How do we make bread countable?

⚠️ Common Mistakes (4)

❌ I have many homeworks.
✅ I have a lot of homework.
💡 Homework = UNCOUNTABLE. No ‘s’! Use ‘a lot of’
❌ Give me one information.
✅ Give me a piece of information.
💡 Information = uncountable → ‘a piece of information’
❌ How much students are there?
✅ How many students are there?
💡 Students = countable → MANY (not much)
❌ She has many luggages.
✅ She has a lot of luggage.
💡 Luggage = UNCOUNTABLE. Never add ‘s’!

❓ Quiz (12 Questions)

1. ‘Water’ is:
2. ‘How _____ books?’ needs:
3. ‘Homework’ is:
4. ‘_____ sugar’ needs:
5. ‘A piece of _____’:
6. Which is WRONG?
7. ‘Furniture’ takes:
8. Indian food: ‘rice’ is:
9. ‘News’ takes:
10. ‘Hair’ is:
11. ‘Less’ is for:
12. ‘Fewer’ is for:

🤓 Fun Facts (3)

🤓 ‘Hair’ is BOTH! Uncountable: ‘She has long hair.’ Countable: ‘There’s a hair in my soup!’ (one strand)
🤓 In Indian English, ‘one chai’ is normal — but standard English says ‘a cup of tea’!
🤓 The word ‘news’ LOOKS plural but is uncountable: ‘The news IS good’ (not ‘news ARE’)!

People Also Ask

What are countable and uncountable nouns?

Countable = can count individually (1 book, 2 books). Uncountable = can’t count individually (water, rice, information). Use ‘many’ with countable, ‘much’ with uncountable.

Why is ‘information’ uncountable?

You can’t say ‘1 information, 2 informations.’ Instead say ‘a piece of information.’ Same for homework, furniture, luggage, advice, news.

How to remember which is which?

Ask: ‘Can I put a NUMBER before it?’ 1 book ✅ (countable). 1 water ❌ (uncountable — need ‘a glass of water’).

👨‍👩‍👧 Parent Tips (5)

  • 1. 🛒 At the grocery: ‘Is rice countable? No! So we say SOME rice, not two rices’
  • 2. 🎯 Quick test: ‘Can you put a number? 1 book ✅, 1 water ❌ — uncountable!’
  • 3. 📝 List 5 uncountable nouns from the kitchen: water, sugar, salt, rice, oil
  • 4. 🇮🇳 Hindi comparison: ‘दो पानी is OK in Hindi but not in English — say a glass of water!’
  • 5. 🔗 Connect to Confusing Words section: much/many and less/fewer pages

❓ FAQ (5)

What are countable and uncountable nouns?

Countable = can count individually (1 book, 2 books). Uncountable = can’t count individually (water, rice, information). Use ‘many’ with countable, ‘much’ with uncountable.

Why is ‘information’ uncountable?

You can’t say ‘1 information, 2 informations.’ Instead say ‘a piece of information.’ Same for homework, furniture, luggage, advice, news.

How to remember which is which?

Ask: ‘Can I put a NUMBER before it?’ 1 book ✅ (countable). 1 water ❌ (uncountable — need ‘a glass of water’).

Is ‘rice’ countable or uncountable?

Uncountable in English! Even though we count grains, we say ‘some rice’ not ‘5 rices.’ Use ‘a plate of rice’ or ‘a bag of rice.’

Is this tested in CBSE?

Yes! Much/many, less/fewer, and correcting errors like ‘many homeworks’ are common CBSE questions.

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