Календарно-тематическое планирование. 11 класс. Домашнее обучение 34 часа


Countable and uncountable nouns CountableNouns with a singular and a plural formCarCars CountableArticles and determiners which are used with countable nouns:A/anTheOne, two, threeSome/anyA lot ofLots ofA few/fewManyPlenty ofA number of Some meanings of articles and determinersFew / a few Few means not many A few means the same as some or a small number of Uncountable Nouns which do not usualy appear in a plural form Uncountable We use a singular verb with uncountable nouns. They are usually objects that are 'masses' and difficult to count, or abstract things, eg: accommodation, cash, chocolate, coffe, fruit, furniture, garlic, hair, milk, money, news, rubbish, salt, shopping, traffic, water, window-shopping. Uncountable Articles and determiners which are used with uncountable nouns:TheSome/anyA lot ofLots ofA little / little MuchPlenty ofAn amount ofA piece of Some meanings of articles and determinersLittle / a little Little is used for emphasizing that an amount is smaller than you would like or expect. A little is used to emphazing than an amount is greater than you might expect. UncountableSome of them only appear in the plural form, eg: clothes, glasses, goods, jeans, scissors, trousers. Countable and uncountableSome nouns can be both, eg: Melted chocolate ( chocolate mass ) Have a chocolate ( one chocolate from a box of chocolates ) Thank you for attention