Are potatoes uncountable?
Índice
- Are potatoes uncountable?
- Is potato chips countable or uncountable?
- Is Cabbage countable or uncountable?
- Is the word potato a countable or uncountable noun?
- Is the potato in tuber form countable or uncountable?
- Is there such a thing as an uncountable potato chip?
- What is the meaning of the word potato?
Are potatoes uncountable?
Potato is a countable noun. You can have a potato and potatoes. Uncountable nouns have no plurals, and cannot normally be used with a/an. Sugar is an uncountable noun.
Is potato chips countable or uncountable?
Potato chips, French fries and sour plums are countable.
Is Cabbage countable or uncountable?
... So from your list, onions and cabbages clearly are countable. Trouble is that when the onions and cabbages are cooked, they may become uncountable. ... Not just cooked foods but prepared, e.g. chopped onions, sliced cabbage.
Is the word potato a countable or uncountable noun?
- Potato is a countable noun. You can have a potato and potatoes. Uncountable. Uncountable nouns have no plurals, and cannot normally be used with a/an. Sugar is an uncountable noun.
Is the potato in tuber form countable or uncountable?
- Answer Wiki. Potato is both countable and uncountable depending on its status or condition. If potatoes are still in tuber form or cooked separately, where individual can pick how many pieces he or she wants, potato in this instance is countable. On the other hand, if potatoes is mashed in to a semi-solid form, it becomes uncountable.
Is there such a thing as an uncountable potato chip?
- If yes, it's uncountable. If no, it's countable. A pen is countable and chalk is uncountable in this theory. According to Longman's dictionary of contemporary English, "chip" is a small piece broken off something. To me, potato chips are still potato chips when broken into smaller pieces.
What is the meaning of the word potato?
- po‧ta‧to /pəˈteɪtəʊ $ -toʊ/ ●●● S2 noun (plural potatoes) 1 [ countable, uncountable] a round white vegetable with a brown, red, or pale yellow skin, that grows under the ground roast/fried/boiled/mashed potato jacket potato (=cooked in its skin) Marie stood at the sink, peeling potatoes (=cutting off the skin). 2 [ countable]