Countable vs. Uncountable – English Grammar Exercises for A1

Grammar » Grammar Exercises for A1 » Countable vs. Uncountable – English Grammar Exercises for A1

Exercises:   123456789101112

Read the conversations below. Imagine you and your friends are planning a weekend getaway and checking if you have enough time, money, and other resources for the trip. Choose the best word or phrase to fill in the blank.

 We need to book the hotel today. How ______ money do we have in our travel fund?

     (A) a lot of

     (B) much

     (C) some

     (D) many

2   The train leaves at 5 PM. How ______ time do we have before we need to go to the station?

     (A) many

     (B) any

     (C) long

     (D) much

3   We are only going for two days. We shouldn’t bring too much ______.

     (A) bags

     (B) luggage

     (C) luggages

     (D) a luggage

4   The airline rules are very strict. How ______ bags are we taking on the plane?

     (A) many

     (B) heavy

     (C) much

     (D) some

 I need to pay for the airport taxi. Do you have ______ cash in your wallet?

     (A) any

     (B) a

     (C) many

     (D) dollars

 I am buying the museum tickets online right now. How ______ tickets do we need?

     (A) much

     (B) any

     (C) many

     (D) price

 I want to bring my big camera, but there isn’t ______ space in my backpack.

     (A) a

     (B) many

     (C) some

     (D) any

8   This is my first time visiting Japan. Can you give me ______ before I pack?

     (A) some advice

     (B) advices

     (C) a good advice

     (D) an advice

 I checked the travel website, but I didn’t find much ______ about the train schedule.

     (A) informations

     (B) details

     (C) information

     (D) an information

10   We need to exchange our money at the bank. How ______ euros do you want to buy?

     (A) cash

     (B) much

     (C) some

     (D) many

11   Our holiday is very short. We only have three ______ in London.

     (A) day

     (B) time

     (C) days

     (D) a days

12   We are going hiking in the mountains. We need to buy ______ food for the trip.

     (A) some

     (B) many

     (C) a

     (D) any

13   It will be very hot during our walking tour. Don’t forget to bring a lot of ______.

     (A) water

     (B) bottles

     (C) waters

     (D) a water

14   Before we leave for the airport, please check that we have both ______.

     (A) luggage

     (B) passports

     (C) passport

     (D) a passport

15   We are going camping, but we don’t have ______ equipment like tents or sleeping bags.

     (A) any

     (B) many

     (C) an

     (D) some

16   We need to leave early because there is always a lot of ______ on the way to the airport.

     (A) traffics

     (B) vehicle

     (C) a traffic

     (D) traffic

17   We should stop at the gas station. We don’t have ______ petrol left in the rental car.

     (A) a lot

     (B) many

     (C) much

     (D) some

18   I bought a new camera for the trip. I want to take a lot of ______!

     (A) photography

     (B) photos

     (C) photo

     (D) a photos

19   Don’t worry about the small problems. The most important thing is to have ______ fun!

     (A) a lot of

     (B) many

     (C) a

     (D) some funs

20   I checked the forecast, and I hope we have ______ weather during our beach holiday.

     (A) a good

     (B) well

     (C) good

     (D) goods

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1  (B) much

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Money” as a general concept is an uncountable noun. To ask about the quantity of an uncountable noun, we use “How much”.
  • Error Analysis: (D) many is a common mistake (learners think money is countable because they count notes/coins). (C) some is a structural error (cannot be used directly after “How”). (A) a lot of is a meaning trap (it is used to state a large quantity, not to form a “How…” question).

2  (D) much

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Time” (meaning hours/minutes) is an uncountable noun. We ask “How much time”.
  • Error Analysis: (A) many is a common mistake. (B) any is a structural error. (C) long is a strong distractor (“How long do we have?” is correct, but “How long time” is grammatically incorrect).

3  (B) luggage

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Luggage” is an uncountable noun representing a collection of bags.
  • Error Analysis: (C) luggages is a very common mistake (adding -s to an uncountable noun). (D) a luggage is a structural error. (A) bags is a meaning trap (“bags” is countable, so it would require “too many bags”, not “too much”).

4  (A) many

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Bags” is a plural countable noun. We ask “How many”.
  • Error Analysis: (C) much is a common mistake. (D) some is a structural error. (B) heavy is a meaning trap (“How heavy are our bags?” is correct, but “How heavy bags are we taking?” is awkward and incorrect here).

5  (A) any

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Cash” is uncountable. In general questions (“Do you have…?”), we use “any”.
  • Error Analysis: (B) a is a common mistake. (C) many is a structural error. (D) dollars is a meaning trap (“Do you have dollars” works, but “any” is the missing grammar word needed to complete the standard A1 phrase).

6  (C) many

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Tickets” are countable physical items.
  • Error Analysis: (A) much is a common mistake. (B) any is a structural error. (D) price is a meaning trap (“What is the price?” is correct, not “How price”).

7  (D) any

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Space” (volume in a bag) is uncountable. In negative sentences (“isn’t”), we use “any”.
  • Error Analysis: (C) some is a common mistake (using ‘some’ in a negative statement). (A) a is a structural error. (B) many is a structural error.

8  (A) some advice

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Advice” is always an uncountable noun in English. We use “some” in polite requests.
  • Error Analysis: (D) an advice and (B) advices are classic common mistakes for A1 learners. (C) a good advice is a structural error (adjectives do not change the uncountable rule; it cannot take “a”).

9  (C) information

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Information” is uncountable.
  • Error Analysis: (A) informations and (D) an information are common A1 mistakes. (B) details is a strong distractor (“details” is countable and would require “didn’t find many details”).

10  (D) many

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Euros” are specific units of currency, making them countable (one euro, two euros).
  • Error Analysis: (B) much is a common mistake (learners confuse specific currency with the general word “money”). (C) some is a structural error. (A) cash is a meaning trap (“How cash” is incorrect).

11  (C) days

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Day” is a countable unit of time. After the number “three”, it must be plural.
  • Error Analysis: (A) day is a common mistake (forgetting the plural). (D) a days is a structural error. (B) time is a meaning trap (“three time” is incorrect; you must use “days” or “hours”).

12  (A) some

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Food” is uncountable. In a positive statement, we use “some”.
  • Error Analysis: (C) a is a common mistake. (B) many is a structural error. (D) any is a structural error (used for negatives/questions).

13  (A) water

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Water” is an uncountable liquid.
  • Error Analysis: (C) waters is a common mistake. (D) a water is a structural error. (B) bottles is a meaning trap (you would need “a lot of bottles of water“, just “bottles” leaves the sentence incomplete in meaning).

14  (B) passports

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Passport” is a countable document. “Both” means two, so the noun must be plural.
  • Error Analysis: (C) passport is a common mistake. (D) a passport is a structural error. (A) luggage is a meaning trap (“both luggage” is grammatically impossible because luggage is uncountable and cannot be “both”).

15  (A) any

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Equipment” is uncountable. In a negative sentence (“don’t have”), we use “any”.
  • Error Analysis: (D) some is a common mistake in negative sentences. (C) an is a structural error. (B) many is a structural error.

16  (D) traffic

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Traffic” (vehicles on a road) is an uncountable noun.
  • Error Analysis: (A) traffics is a common mistake. (C) a traffic is a structural error. (B) vehicle is a meaning trap (“a lot of vehicle” lacks the necessary plural -s; “traffic” fits the uncountable grammar perfectly).

17  (C) much

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Petrol” (gasoline) is an uncountable liquid. In negative sentences, “much” is used to indicate a large quantity.
  • Error Analysis: (B) many is a common mistake (used only for countable). (D) some is a structural error in this negative context. (A) a lot is a meaning trap (it misses the preposition “of” -> “a lot of”).

18  (B) photos

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Photo” is a countable noun. After “a lot of”, countable nouns must be plural.
  • Error Analysis: (C) photo is a common mistake. (D) a photos is a structural error. (A) photography is a meaning trap (it is an uncountable concept/hobby, you don’t “take a lot of photography”).

19  (A) a lot of

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Fun” is an uncountable abstract noun. “A lot of” is perfect for positive statements.
  • Error Analysis: (B) many is a common mistake. (C) a is a structural error (“a fun” is wrong). (D) some funs is a structural error (adding -s to fun).

20  (C) good

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Weather” is an uncountable noun. It stands alone with its adjective without an article.
  • Error Analysis: (A) a good is the most common A1 mistake (learners always want to say “a good weather”). (D) goods is a structural error. (B) well is a meaning trap (adverb, not used to describe nouns like weather).
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER

When planning a trip, you will constantly talk about your resources. Here is how to avoid the biggest A1 mistakes:

  1. The “Money” Paradox: * The word “money” itself is UNCOUNTABLE. You cannot say a money or moneys. You must ask: “How much money?”
    • However, specific currencies are COUNTABLE. You ask: “How many dollars/euros/pounds?”
  2. The “Time” Rule: * The word “time” (meaning duration) is UNCOUNTABLE. You ask: “How much time do we have?”
    • However, specific units of time are COUNTABLE. You ask: “How many hours/days/weeks?”
  3. Other Tricky Travel Uncountables:
    • Luggage / Baggage: NEVER say luggages. If you want to count them, use the word bags or suitcases (How many bags?).
    • Information / Advice / Equipment / Traffic: These are all invisible masses or general groups. Treat them like water! No “a/an”, no “-s”, and always use “much” or “some/any”.

Exercises:   123456789101112

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This