Countable nouns can be counted and have both singular and plural forms. They answer the question 'how many'. Usually use determiners like 'a', 'this', 'any', or 'a lot of'. Examples include 'a dog', 'a week', 'a dozen', 'a few'
Nouns represent people, places, things, or ideas. Nouns can function as subjects, objects, or complements in sentences
"Any" is not mandatory in questions. Singular forms of "any" are generally incorrect. Plural forms of "any" are more common and optional
English nouns can be either countable or uncountable. Most English nouns are countable, referring to individual things. Uncountable nouns refer to whole or mass, cannot be counted
Countable nouns have both singular and plural forms. They can take indefinite articles and use quantifiers. Examples include dog, cat, pizza, apple. Can be modified with 'many' or 'a few'
Countable nouns name separate objects that can be counted. Uncountable nouns name materials, liquids, and abstract qualities. Countable nouns can use numbers and articles, uncountable nouns cannot. Many nouns have both countable and uncountable uses with different meanings