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 sentences below. Imagine you are a new employee at a company or a student at a library, asking how to connect your devices and use the tech resources. Choose the best word or phrase to fill in the blank.

 I am a new employee here. I don’t have ______ to check my emails yet.

     (A) equipment

     (B) computer

     (C) a computer

     (D) an computer

2   Excuse me, how do I connect my mobile phone to ______ in this building?

     (A) the Wi-Fi

     (B) a Wi-Fi

     (C) an internet

     (D) Wi-Fis

3   There are five new ______ on the big table in the meeting room.

     (A) software

     (B) laptops

     (C) a laptops

     (D) laptop

 I cannot turn on the router because the office doesn’t have ______ right now.

     (A) an electricity

     (B) electricities

     (C) some electricity

     (D) any electricity

5   To connect to the printer, please plug ______ into the back of your laptop.

     (A) cable

     (B) a cable

     (C) some Wi-Fi

     (D) an cable

 I need to print a long document. Is there ______ paper left in the printer?

     (A) many

     (B) a

     (C) any

     (D) some

 How ______ emails do you usually receive from the IT manager every day?

     (A) some

     (B) much

     (C) any

     (D) many

 I can’t download this large video file because I don’t have much ______ on my phone.

     (A) battery

     (B) datas

     (C) data

     (D) a data

9   The IT department just gave me ______ to access the secure company network.

     (A) a password

     (B) some password

     (C) passwords

     (D) an password

10   This public library provides free ______ for all students and visitors.

     (A) internets

     (B) internet

     (C) computers

     (D) an internet

11   We need to buy new ______ for all the computers in the design room.

     (A) a software

     (B) program

     (C) softwares

     (D) software

12   How ______ time do I have to use this public computer before it logs out?

     (A) long

     (B) much

     (C) many

     (D) some

13   My phone battery is dying. Do you have ______ I can borrow?

     (A) a charger

     (B) any electricity

     (C) some charger

     (D) charger

14   The network technician needs ______ to fix the server issue today.

     (A) a detail

     (B) an information

     (C) some information

     (D) informations

15   The company just bought a lot of expensive ______ for the new server room.

     (A) machine

     (B) equipments

     (C) an equipment

     (D) equipment

16   If you have connection problems, please ask the IT help desk for ______.

     (A) a help

     (B) some advice

     (C) an advice

     (D) advices

17   The Wi-Fi is very slow today because there is too much ______ on the network.

     (A) traffic

     (B) traffics

     (C) users

     (D) a traffic

18   I have too ______ open on my laptop, and now the screen is completely frozen.

     (A) much software

     (B) many programs

     (C) much programs

     (D) many software

19   I don’t remember the Wi-Fi password. Can you write it down on ______?

     (A) some papers

     (B) piece of paper

     (C) a piece of paper

     (D) a paper

20   The librarian said we cannot bring our own ______ into the computer lab.

     (A) device

     (B) hardwares

     (C) an equipment

     (D) devices

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Computer” is a singular countable noun starting with a consonant sound, so it takes “a”.
  • Error Analysis: (B) computer is a common mistake (missing article). (D) an computer is a structural error (wrong article). (A) equipment is a strong distractor/meaning trap (it is uncountable and cannot be used alone without “any” or “a piece of” in this context).

2  (A)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Wi-Fi” is an uncountable noun. We use “the” because we are talking about the specific Wi-Fi of this building.
  • Error Analysis: (B) a Wi-Fi is a common mistake (A1 learners often try to count it). (D) Wi-Fis is a structural error. (C) an internet is a structural error (internet is uncountable and usually takes “the”).

3  (B)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Laptop” is a countable noun. After the number “five”, it must be pluralized.
  • Error Analysis: (D) laptop is a common mistake (forgetting the plural “s”). (C) a laptops is a structural error. (A) software is a meaning trap (software is invisible, you cannot put “five software” on a table).

4  (D)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Electricity” is an uncountable noun. In a negative sentence (“doesn’t have”), we use “any”.
  • Error Analysis: (A) an electricity is a common mistake. (B) electricities is a structural error. (C) some electricity is a structural error (used in positive sentences).

5  (B)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Cable” (dây cáp) is a physical, countable object. It needs the article “a”.
  • Error Analysis: (A) cable is a common mistake (missing article). (D) an cable is a structural error. (C) some Wi-Fi is a meaning trap (you cannot physically “plug in” Wi-Fi, it is a wireless signal).

6  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Paper” (for a printer) is uncountable. In a question, we use “any”.
  • Error Analysis: (D) some is a common mistake (learners use it for all questions). (B) a is a structural error (uncountable nouns don’t take “a”). (A) many is a structural error (only for countable nouns).

7  (D)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Emails” are individual digital messages, making them plural and countable. Therefore, we use “How many”.
  • Error Analysis: (B) much is a common mistake. (A) some and (C) any are structural errors in a “How…” quantity question.

8  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Data” (mobile data/internet allowance) is treated as an uncountable mass noun in everyday tech English.
  • Error Analysis: (B) datas is a common mistake. (D) a data is a structural error. (A) battery is a meaning trap (“much battery” sounds unnatural compared to “data” when talking about downloading a file).

9  (A)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Password” is a specific, countable string of characters. It takes “a”.
  • Error Analysis: (B) some password is a common mistake. (D) an password is a structural error. (C) passwords is a structural error (missing an article or determiner like “some” or “the”).

10  (B)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Internet” is an uncountable concept. When used as a general service, it doesn’t take an article or “s”.
  • Error Analysis: (A) internets is a common mistake. (D) an internet is a structural error. (C) computers is a meaning trap (the library provides computers, but “free computers” implies giving them away to keep, whereas “free internet” means free access).

11  (D)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Software” is an uncountable noun in English. It cannot take “a” or “-s”.
  • Error Analysis: (C) softwares is a very common mistake for IT beginners. (A) a software is a structural error. (B) program is a meaning trap (it is countable, so it would need to be “a new program” or “new programs”).

12  (B)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Time” (duration) is uncountable, so we ask “How much”.
  • Error Analysis: (C) many is a common mistake. (D) some is a structural error. (A) long is a meaning trap (“How long do I have” is correct, but “How long time” is incorrect English).

13  (A)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Charger” is a physical, countable device. It needs “a”.
  • Error Analysis: (D) charger is a common mistake. (C) some charger is a structural error. (B) any electricity is a meaning trap (you borrow a physical charger, not invisible electricity).

14  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Information” is uncountable. In a positive sentence, we use “some”.
  • Error Analysis: (B) an information and (D) informations are classic A1 errors (trying to count an uncountable noun). (A) a detail is a meaning trap (too specific, “some information” is the natural collocation).

15  (D)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Equipment” (hardware devices collectively) is an uncountable noun.
  • Error Analysis: (B) equipments is a very common mistake. (C) an equipment is a structural error. (A) machine is a meaning trap (countable, so it must be “machines” after “a lot of”).

16  (B)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Advice” is an uncountable noun. We use “some” in a positive statement/request.
  • Error Analysis: (C) an advice and (D) advices are common structural mistakes. (A) a help is a strong distractor (“help” is uncountable, so “a help” is wrong).

17  (A)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Traffic” (data moving across a network) is uncountable. We use “too much”.
  • Error Analysis: (B) traffics is a common mistake. (D) a traffic is a structural error. (C) users is a meaning trap (“users” is countable and would require “too many”).

18  (B)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Programs” (applications) are countable. We use “too many”.
  • Error Analysis: (C) much programs is a common mistake. (D) many software is a structural error (software is uncountable). (A) much software is a strong distractor (grammatically possible, but “open much software” is not a natural English collocation; we open “programs”).

19  (C)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Paper” is an uncountable mass. To count it, we use the unit “a piece of”.
  • Error Analysis: (D) a paper is a common mistake (it means a newspaper or academic essay, not a blank sheet). (B) piece of paper is a structural error (missing “a”). (A) some papers is a meaning trap (implies multiple large documents).

20  (D)

  • Why it is correct (Key): “Device” is countable. When speaking generally about personal items, we use the plural “devices”.
  • Error Analysis: (A) device is a common mistake. (B) hardwares is a structural error (hardware is uncountable). (C) an equipment is a structural error (equipment is uncountable).
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER

When you are checking utilities or setting up your tech at a new office or library, remember how to group your nouns:

  1. Physical Objects (Countable Nouns):
    • Words: computer, laptop, phone, screen, cable, charger, router, printer, password, program, email, device.
    • Rules: You can touch or clearly count them. Use a/an for one (a laptop) and add -s for many (two cables). Use many in questions (How many devices?).
  2. Invisible Signals & Mass Concepts (Uncountable Nouns):
    • Words: Wi-Fi, internet, electricity, software, hardware, equipment, data, traffic, information.
    • Rules: These are invisible waves, codes, or general categories.
      • NEVER use a/an (No “a software”, No “a Wi-Fi”).
      • NEVER add -s (No “softwares”, No “equipments”).
      • Use some (positive), any (negative/questions), or much (How much data?).
  3. The “Paper” Rule: “Paper” in a printer is uncountable. If you want one sheet, you must say “a piece of paper”, NOT “a paper”.

Exercises:   123456789101112

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