In linguistics, a count noun (also countable noun) is a noun that can be modified by a quantity and that occurs in both singular and plural forms, and that can co-occur with quantificational like every, each, several, etc. A mass noun has none of these properties: It cannot be modified by a number, cannot occur in plural, and cannot co-occur with quantificational determiners.
Below are examples of all the properties of count nouns holding for the count noun chair, but not for the mass noun furniture.
+ Occurrence in plural |
There is chair in the room. |
There are furnitures in the room. |
There is a furniture in the room. |
Some determiners can be used with both mass and count nouns, including "all", "no", and "some". Others cannot: "few", "many", "those", and numbers ("one") are used with count nouns; "little" and "much" with mass nouns. According to a controversial prescription, "fewer" and "fewest" is reserved for count nouns and "less" and "least" for mass nouns (see Fewer vs. less), but "less" has always been commonly used for count nouns. Despite this, "more" is uncontroversially the proper comparative for both "many" and "much". This criticism only dates back to 1770, but the criticized usage dates back to Old English.
+ Co-occurrence with count determiners |
Every furniture is man-made. |
There are several furnitures in the room. |
Classifiers are sometimes used as count nouns preceding mass nouns, in order to redirect the speaker's focus away from the mass nature. For example, "There's some furniture in the room" can be restated, with a change of focus, to "There are some pieces of furniture in the room"; and "let's have some fun" can be refocused as "Let's have a bit of fun". In English, some nouns are used frequently as both count nouns (with or without a classifier) and mass nouns. For example:
A classifier, therefore, implies that the object(s) referred to are countable in the sense that the speaker intends them to be enumerated, rather than considered as a unit (regardless of quantity). Notice that the classifier changes as the unit being counted changes.
Words such as "milk" or "rice" are not so obviously countable entities, but they can be counted with an appropriate unit of measure in both English and Mandarin (e.g., " glasses of milk" or " spoonfuls of rice").
The use of a classifier is similar to, but not identical with, the use of units of measurement to count groups of objects in English. For example, in "three shelves of books", where "shelves" is used as a unit of measurement.
On the other hand, some languages, like Turkish language, treat all the nouns (even things which are not obviously countable) as countable nouns.
Even then, it is possible to use units of measures with numbers in Turkish, even with the very obviously countable nouns. The Turkish nouns can not take a plural suffix after the numbers and the units of measure.
|
|