Assignment - Infographics - 146
A Note on What Makes This an Infographic
Defining countable and uncountable nouns in two sentences is a grammar note. An infographic about this topic makes the distinction feel logical: why can you count chairs but not furniture? Why does “advice” not have a plural? Show the rules in action - the determiners that go with each type, the quantifiers that change, and the common mistakes so the student knows exactly which words to watch.
Objective
Create a comparison infographic in Canva that explains countable and uncountable nouns, shows which determiners and quantifiers apply to each, and provides a reference list of commonly confused uncountable nouns.
Content to Cover
Opening Anchor
A countable noun names something that can be counted as individual units. It has a singular and a plural form. An uncountable noun names something treated as a whole - it cannot be counted as separate units and has no plural form in standard usage.
Countable Nouns
- Can be singular or plural: a book / books, one student / three students.
- Can follow a/an in the singular: a chair, an idea.
- Can follow numbers: two books, five chairs.
- Examples: book, chair, student, teacher, question, city, egg, phone.
- Sentences: “I have a question.” / “There are three students absent today.”
Uncountable Nouns
- Have no plural form: you cannot say “advices,” “informations,” or “furnitures.”
- Cannot follow a/an directly.
- Cannot follow numbers directly - use a unit of measurement instead: a piece of advice, a bit of information, a piece of furniture.
- Examples: water, air, rice, music, advice, information, knowledge, furniture, equipment, homework, money, traffic, weather, luggage, bread, butter.
Determiners and Quantifiers
This is the practical heart of the infographic. Show which words go with which:
| Quantifier | Countable | Uncountable |
|---|---|---|
| a / an | a book ✓ | a water ✗ |
| many | many books ✓ | many water ✗ |
| much | much books ✗ | much water ✓ |
| a few | a few books ✓ | a few water ✗ |
| a little | a little books ✗ | a little water ✓ |
| some | some books ✓ | some water ✓ |
| any | any books ✓ | any water ✓ |
| a lot of | a lot of books ✓ | a lot of water ✓ |
| the | the books ✓ | the water ✓ |
Common Mistakes Panel
These nouns are uncountable in English but are often treated as countable by students:
- Advice (not “advices”) - “She gave me some good advice.”
- Information (not “informations”) - “I need more information.”
- Furniture (not “furnitures”) - “We bought new furniture.”
- Homework (not “homeworks”) - “The teacher gave us homework.”
- Equipment (not “equipments”)
- Knowledge (not “knowledges”)
- News (always singular) - “The news is good.”
- Progress (not “progresses” in this sense)
Making Uncountable Nouns Countable
To refer to a specific quantity, use a unit of measurement:
- a glass of water / two glasses of water
- a piece of advice / a piece of furniture / a piece of bread
- a bag of rice / a loaf of bread / a sheet of paper
Design in Canva
- Two main columns: countable and uncountable.
- Quantifier comparison table in the center.
- Common mistakes panel at the bottom with clear error/correction format.
- Unit of measurement panel on the side.
Required Elements
- Countable and uncountable nouns defined with examples.
- Quantifier comparison table.
- Common mistakes panel with at least 6 uncountable nouns.
- Unit of measurement reference.
- Title: “Countable and Uncountable Nouns.”