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mass noun.
13 Answers
Can anyone give me examples of a mass noun. So often on Countdown
Susie Dent disallows a word because it is a mass noun and I wondered what
the rules were?
Susie Dent disallows a word because it is a mass noun and I wondered what
the rules were?
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In its simplest form, a mass noun is a singular noun which can't be pluralised even though it is used to refer to more than one (i.e. a mass) of individual items. To complicate things slightly, mass nouns take either a singular or plural verb depending on context.
And, for the record, Susie disallows mass nouns only if a contestant has attempted to pluralise them. E.g. 'cattle' would be perfectly acceptable, but 'cattles' wouldn't.
And, for the record, Susie disallows mass nouns only if a contestant has attempted to pluralise them. E.g. 'cattle' would be perfectly acceptable, but 'cattles' wouldn't.
Butters most certainly should have been allowed. As has been suggested, a butter is "a fighter who strikes the opponent with the head", and therefore can easily be pluralised. Not only that, though - butter, as a regular verb, adds an 's' onto the infinitive to make the third person singular of the present tense, as in "He butters his bread very carefully".