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.

 We need to buy ten red ______ for the fruit salad.

     (a) appleses

     (b) apples

     (c) apple

2   I want to make fifteen big ______ for the picnic.

     (a) sandwichs

     (b) sandwich

     (c) sandwiches

 Please buy six fresh ______ for the BBQ sauce.

     (a) tomatoes

     (b) tomatos

     (c) tomato

4   We also need eight large ______ to bake in the fire.

     (a) potato

     (b) potatoes

     (c) potatos

5   Don’t forget to get three yellow ______ for the burgers.

     (a) onion

     (b) oniones

     (c) onions

6   For dessert, let’s buy ten sweet ______.

     (a) peaches

     (b) peachs

     (c) peach

7   My sister loves tropical fruit, so get five ______.

     (a) mango

     (b) mangos

     (c) mangoes

 We need paper plates and paper ______ for the food.

     (a) dishes

     (b) dishs

     (c) dish

 Buy twenty plastic ______ for the drinks.

     (a) glass

     (b) glasses

     (c) glasss

10   We will take a lot of ______ at the party tonight!

     (a) photoes

     (b) photo

     (c) photos

11   Can you buy two ______ of chocolate cookies?

     (a) boxes

     (b) boxs

     (c) box

12   We need a tool to light the BBQ. Buy a small box of ______.

     (a) match

     (b) matches

     (c) matchs

13   I want to play music, so I will bring two small ______.

     (a) radioes

     (b) radio

     (c) radios

14   Let’s buy three ______ of green grapes.

     (a) bunchs

     (b) bunches

     (c) bunch

15   We are having a BBQ, so we need to buy a lot of ______.

     (a) meat

     (b) meats

     (c) meates

16   My friend doesn’t eat pork, so we will grill some ______.

     (a) fishes

     (b) fishs

     (c) fish

17   We can record some funny ______ of the games.

     (a) videos

     (b) videoes

     (c) video

18   Please buy some yellow ______ to put inside the burgers.

     (a) cheeses

     (b) cheese

     (c) a cheese

19   We need to cut the food. Do we have enough sharp ______?

     (a) knifes

     (b) knife

     (c) knives

20   Finally, buy a lot of fruit ______ for the children to drink.

     (a) juice

     (b) juices

     (c) a juice

ANSWER KEY & EXPLANATIONS

1 (b) apples

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (b) ‘Apples’ is the regular plural form.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Appleses’ is a double plural mistake.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Apple’ is singular, but “ten” requires a plural noun.

2 (c) sandwiches

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (c) ‘Sandwiches’. Nouns ending in ‘-ch’ require ‘-es’ to become plural.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Sandwichs’ is a very common spelling error because learners forget the ‘e’.
  • Structural Error: (b) ‘Sandwich’ is singular, contradicting the number “fifteen”.

3 (a) tomatoes

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (a) ‘Tomatoes’. For some common words ending in a consonant + ‘o’, we must add ‘-es’.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Tomatos’ is a classic spelling mistake.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Tomato’ is singular.

4 (b) potatoes

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (b) ‘Potatoes’. Like ‘tomato’, ‘potato’ ends in ‘o’ and requires ‘-es’.

  • Common Mistake: (c) ‘Potatos’ is an incorrect spelling.
  • Structural Error: (a) ‘Potato’ is singular.

5 (c) onions

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (c) ‘Onions’ is a regular noun, so we just add ‘-s’.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Oniones’ is an over-application of the ‘-es’ rule.
  • Structural Error: (a) ‘Onion’ is singular.

6 (a) peaches

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (a) ‘Peaches’. The word ends in ‘-ch’, so we add ‘-es’.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Peachs’ is an incorrect spelling.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Peach’ is singular.

7 (c) mangoes

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (c) ‘Mangoes’ follows the same rule as tomato and potato (consonant + o takes ‘-es’). (Note: ‘mangos’ is sometimes accepted in modern dictionaries, but ‘mangoes’ is the standard taught in CEFR A1 grammar).

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Mangos’ is often used but less formally correct in traditional grammar tests.
  • Structural Error: (a) ‘Mango’ is singular.

8 (a) dishes

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (a) ‘Dishes’. Nouns ending in ‘-sh’ require ‘-es’.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Dishs’ is an incorrect spelling.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Dish’ is singular.

9 (b) glasses

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (b) ‘Glasses’. Nouns ending in ‘-ss’ require ‘-es’.

  • Common Mistake: (c) ‘Glasss’ is an impossible spelling in English.
  • Structural Error: (a) ‘Glass’ is singular.

10 (c) photos

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (c) ‘Photos’. This is an important exception! Words ending in ‘o’ that are abbreviations (photograph -> photo) or related to technology/art usually only take ‘-s’.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Photoes’ is a very common mistake where learners over-apply the tomato/potato rule.
  • Structural Error: (b) ‘Photo’ is singular.

11 (a) boxes

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (a) ‘Boxes’. Nouns ending in ‘-x’ take ‘-es’.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Boxs’ is an incorrect spelling.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Box’ is singular.

12 (b) matches

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (b) ‘Matches’. The word ends in ‘-ch’, so we add ‘-es’.

  • Common Mistake: (c) ‘Matchs’ is a spelling error.
  • Structural Error: (a) ‘Match’ is singular.

13 (c) radios

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (c) ‘Radios’. When a word ends in a vowel + o (i-o), we simply add ‘-s’.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Radioes’ is a spelling mistake.
  • Structural Error: (b) ‘Radio’ is singular.

14 (b) bunches

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (b) ‘Bunches’. The word ends in ‘-ch’, so we add ‘-es’.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Bunchs’ is an incorrect spelling.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Bunch’ is singular.

15 (a) meat

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (a) ‘Meat’ is an uncountable noun. It never takes an ‘-s’ or ‘-es’ in general contexts.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Meats’ is a common error for learners whose native language counts meat.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Meates’ is completely incorrect.

16 (c) fish

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (c) ‘Fish’ is an irregular noun that stays the same in both singular and plural (zero plural).

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Fishes’ is usually incorrect when talking about food.
  • Structural Error: (b) ‘Fishs’ is a spelling error.

17 (a) videos

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (a) ‘Videos’. Because it ends in a vowel + o (e-o), it only takes an ‘-s’.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Videoes’ is a spelling error.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘Video’ is singular.

18 (b) cheese

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (b) ‘Cheese’ is an uncountable noun when talking about a mass amount for a party.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Cheeses’ is incorrect here (it is only used for “types of cheese”).
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘A cheese’ is incorrect because uncountable nouns do not take “a” or “an”.

19 (c) knives

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (c) ‘Knives’. For nouns ending in ‘-fe’, we change the ‘f’ to ‘v’ and add ‘-es’.

  • Common Mistake: (a) ‘Knifes’ is a common mistake that ignores the ‘-ves’ rule.
  • Structural Error: (b) ‘Knife’ is singular.

20 (a) juice

Explanation: * Correct (Key): (a) ‘Juice’ is an uncountable liquid.

  • Common Mistake: (b) ‘Juices’ is incorrect when talking about a general amount of drink.
  • Structural Error: (c) ‘A juice’ is grammatically incorrect for an uncountable noun in this context.
GRAMMAR POINTS TO REMEMBER
  1. The “-CH” Rule: If a food or item ends in -ch, you must add -es to make it plural so it is easy to pronounce.
    • Examples: sandwich -> sandwiches, peach -> peaches, match -> matches, bunch -> bunches.
  2. The “-O” Rule: Some very common vegetables and fruits ending in -o take -es.
    • Examples: tomato -> tomatoes, potato -> potatoes, mango -> mangoes.
  3. The “-O” Exceptions (The Traps): * If a word ends in a vowel + o (like radio, video), just add -s (radio -> radios, video -> videos).
    • If a word is related to photography/technology or is short for a longer word, just add -s (photo -> photos).
  4. Uncountable Party Food: Remember that you cannot count mass food or liquids with an “-s”.
    • Words like meat, cheese, water, and juice stay in their base form (e.g., a lot of meat, NOT a lot of meats).

Exercises:   123456789101112

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