↓
Exercises
Regular plural nouns (one car – two cars)
- exercise 1: choose the correct form of the plural for the noun
- exercise 2: fill in the plural of the noun
- exercise 3: fill in the plural of the noun
- exercise 4: fill in the plural of the noun
- exercise 5: choose the correct form of the plural for the nouns ending in -f
- exercise 6: fill in the correct form of the plural for the nouns ending in -f(e)
- exercise 7: fill in the correct form of the plural for the nouns ending in -o-
- exercise 8: fill in the correct form of the plural for the nouns ending in -e- and -s
- exercise 9: fill in the correct form of the plural for the nouns ending in y-
Irregular plural nouns (one man – two men)
Regular and irregular plural nouns
Countable nouns (a lump of sugar) and uncountable nouns (sugar)
- exercise 1: decide whether nouns are countable or uncountable
- exercise 2: decide whether nouns are countable or uncountable
- exercise 3: decide whether nouns are countable or uncountable
- exercise 4: choose the best word or phrase to complete the gap
- exercise 5: choose the correct sentence
- exercise 6: choose a countable or uncountable noun to fill the gap
Countable nouns and uncountable nouns in combination with articles and quantifiers like some, any, much, many and a lot of
- exercise 1: fill in a, an, some, any, how much, how many, a lot of, not much or not many
- exercise 2: choose a, an, some, any, much, many, a lot of
- exercise 3: choose much, many, a lot of, any, some, a little, a few
- exercise 4: choose the correct answer
Subject – verb agreement (A number of people were waiting for the bus.)
- exercise 1: make the verb agree with the subject and choose the correct verb form
- exercise 2: make the verb agree with the subject and choose the correct verb form
- exercise 3: two exercises for practising subject-verb agreement
- exercise 4: two exercises for practising subject-verb agreement
- exercise 5: make the verb agree with the subject and choose the correct verb form
- exercise 6: make the verb agree with the subject and choose the correct verb form
Pair nouns (a pair of trousers) and group nouns (family, government) (intermediate)
- exercise 1: decide whether the noun is singular or plural and choose the correct verb form
- exercise 2: decide whether the noun is singular or plural and choose the correct verb form
Useful pages
- exercises for practising few, a few, little and a little
- exercises for practising much, many and a lot of
↑
error: