Singular and Plural Nouns – English Grammar Exercises for A1

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for A1 » Singular and Plural Nouns – English Grammar Exercises for A1

Exercises:   123456789101112

Choose the correct option (A, B, or C) to complete each sentence.

 Good morning, everyone. Let’s count how many ______ are in the classroom today.

     (a) studentes

     (b) students

     (c) student

 First, there is only one ______ in the room, and that is me.

     (a) teacher

     (b) a teacher

     (c) teachers

3   I see five young ______ sitting in the front row.

     (a) boies

     (b) boys

     (c) boy

4   Next to them, there are six ______ writing in their notebooks.

     (a) girls

     (b) girl

     (c) girles

 So, we have exactly eleven ______ in this room right now.

     (a) people

     (b) peoples

     (c) persons

6   Look at the back row. There is one tall ______ standing near the door.

     (a) men

     (b) mans

     (c) man

7   In the meeting room next door, there are four ______ talking about the project.

     (a) mens

     (b) men

     (c) man

8   Beside the window, I see one ______ drinking a cup of coffee.

     (a) woman

     (b) women

     (c) womans

9   At the main table, there are three ______ looking at their laptops.

     (a) womens

     (b) woman

     (c) women

10   Today, we have a special guest. One small ______ is visiting the class.

     (a) childs

     (b) child

     (c) children

11   On Fridays, the managers usually bring their ______ to the office.

     (a) childrens

     (b) childs

     (c) children

12   We have fifteen people, but I only count fourteen ______. We need one more!

     (a) chairs

     (b) chair

     (c) chaires

13   We also need two more ______ because some students are sharing.

     (a) desks

     (b) deskes

     (c) desk

14   Wait, I think one ______ is missing from the attendance list.

     (a) people

     (b) person

     (c) peoples

15   Okay, let’s write it down. We have ten ______ (pronounced /ˈwɪmɪn/) in total.

     (a) women

     (b) woman

     (c) womens

16   And we have exactly eight ______ (pronounced /men/) in the room.

     (a) man

     (b) men

     (c) mens

17   Please write all your full ______ on this attendance sheet.

     (a) name

     (b) nameses

     (c) names

18   Could someone bring ten clean ______ of water for the guests?

     (a) glass

     (b) glasses

     (c) glasss

19   I will send the final headcount ______ to the principal right now.

     (a) informations

     (b) informationes

     (c) information

20   Thank you for the report! All the ______ are now ready to start the lesson.

     (a) people

     (b) person

     (c) peoples

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1 (b) students

Explanation:Correct (Key): (b) ‘Students’ is the correct regular plural form to use after “how many”.

  • Common Mistake: (c) ‘Student’ is singular. “How many” must be followed by a plural noun.
  • Structural Error: (a) ‘Studentes’ is a spelling mistake.

2 (a) teacher

Explanation:Correct (Key): (a) ‘Teacher’ is the correct singular form, matching “only one”.

  • Common Mistake: (c) ‘Teachers’ is plural.
  • Structural Error: (b) ‘A teacher’ creates a double determiner error (“one a teacher”).

3 (b) boys

Explanation:Correct (Key): (b) ‘Boys’. For nouns ending in a vowel + y (o-y), we just add ‘-s’.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Boies’ is a spelling mistake where learners over-apply the “-ies” rule.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Boy’ is singular, but the number is “five”.

4 (a) girls

Explanation:Correct (Key): (a) ‘Girls’ is the correct regular plural form.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Girl’ is singular.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Girles’ is a spelling mistake.

5 (a) people

Explanation:Correct (Key): (a) ‘People’ is the irregular plural form of ‘person’. It is used for counting groups of humans.

  • Common Mistake: (c) ‘Persons’ is very formal and rarely used in everyday spoken English. A1 learners should default to ‘people’.
  • Structural Error: (b) ‘Peoples’ is incorrect because ‘people’ is already plural.

6 (c) man

Explanation:Correct (Key): (c) ‘Man’ is the singular form, matching “one tall”.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Men’ is plural.
  • Structural Error: (b) ‘Mans’ does not exist.

7 (b) men

Explanation:Correct (Key): (b) ‘Men’ is the irregular plural form of ‘man’, matching the number “four”.

  • Common Mistake: (c) ‘Man’ is singular.
  • Structural Error: (a) ‘Mens’ is a double plural error.

8 (a) woman

Explanation:Correct (Key): (a) ‘Woman’ is the singular form, matching “one”.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Women’ is plural.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Womans’ does not exist.

9 (c) women

Explanation:Correct (Key): (c) ‘Women’ is the irregular plural form of ‘woman’. The number “three” requires a plural noun.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Woman’ is singular.
  • Structural Error: (a) ‘Womens’ is a double plural error.

10 (b) child

Explanation:Correct (Key): (b) ‘Child’ is singular, matching the number “one”.

  • Common Mistake: (c) ‘Children’ is plural.
  • Structural Error: (a) ‘Childs’ is an incorrect regularized form.

11 (c) children

Explanation:Correct (Key): (c) ‘Children’ is the irregular plural form of ‘child’.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Childs’ is a very common beginner mistake.
  • Structural Error: (a) ‘Childrens’ is a double plural error.

12 (a) chairs

Explanation:Correct (Key): (a) ‘Chairs’ is the regular plural form.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Chair’ is singular, but the number is “fourteen”.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Chaires’ is a spelling error.

13 (a) desks

Explanation:Correct (Key): (a) ‘Desks’ is the correct regular plural.

  • Common Mistake: (c) ‘Desk’ is singular.
  • Structural Error: (b) ‘Deskes’ is an over-application of the “-es” rule.

14 (b) person

Explanation:Correct (Key): (b) ‘Person’ is singular, matching “one”.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘People’ is plural, contradicting “one”.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Peoples’ is structurally incorrect here.

15 (a) women

Explanation:Correct (Key): (a) ‘Women’ is the plural form. The pronunciation hint /ˈwɪmɪn/ is a major clue, as it sounds very different from its spelling.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Woman’ is singular.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Womens’ is a double plural mistake.

16 (b) men

Explanation:Correct (Key): (b) ‘Men’ is the plural form of ‘man’.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Man’ is singular.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Mens’ is a double plural mistake.

17 (c) names

Explanation:Correct (Key): (c) ‘Names’ is the plural form. Since everyone has a name, “all your” implies multiple names.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Name’ is singular.
  • Structural Error: (b) ‘Nameses’ is an incorrect spelling.

18 (b) glasses

Explanation:Correct (Key): (b) ‘Glasses’. Nouns ending in ‘-ss’ must take ‘-es’ to become plural.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Glass’ is singular, but the number is “ten”.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Glasss’ is an impossible spelling in English.

19 (c) information

Explanation:Correct (Key): (c) ‘Information’ is an uncountable noun. It never takes an ‘-s’.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Informations’ is a very common error for English learners who translate directly from their native languages.
  • Structural Error: (b) ‘Informationes’ is completely incorrect.

20 (a) people

Explanation:Correct (Key): (a) ‘People’ is the plural of person. “All the…” indicates the whole group.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Person’ is singular.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Peoples’ is a double plural error.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER
  1. Counting People (The Most Important Irregular Nouns): When reporting a headcount, you must know these irregular changes by heart. Never add an “-s” to them:
    • 1 person -> 2 people
    • 1 man -> 2 men
    • 1 woman -> 2 women
    • 1 child -> 2 children
  2. Pronunciation Trap (Woman vs. Women): * Singular: Woman is pronounced with an “oo” sound (/ˈwʊmən/).
    • Plural: Women is pronounced with an “ih” sound (/ˈwɪmɪn/). Note that the “o” changes its sound completely!
  3. Regular People: Some nouns for people are completely regular. Just add -s:
    • 1 boy -> 2 boys
    • 1 girl -> 2 girls
    • 1 student -> 2 students
  4. Uncountable Data: When you send your report, remember that the word information is uncountable. You cannot say “informations.”

Exercises:   123456789101112

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