Uncountable Nouns List


common uncountable nouns.


uncountable nouns list.



Uncountable nouns are nouns that can not count. 

This is a list of uncountable nouns from a to z.

A-E

uncountable nouns list from a to e 


A

  • Absence: the fact that you are not where you are normally supposed to be.
  • Accommodation: a place to live, work or stay.
  • Advice: an opinion given by someone regarding what you should do or how you should act in a certain situation.
  • Age: the length of time someone or something has been alive or lived.
  • Agriculture: farming.
  • Air: the gas mixture that surrounds the planet and which we breathe.
  • Alcohol: a clear liquid that can cause drunkenness and is also used as a chemical in fuel and drugs.
  • Anger: a strong desire to harm someone or be unpleasant as a result of anything unpleasant or cruel that has occurred.
  • Applause: the sound of individuals continually clapping their hands to express satisfaction or approval of something, such as a performance or speech
  • Arithmetic: the part of mathematics concerned with the addition, and multiplication of numbers.
  • Art: the creation of beautiful items, pictures, music, and other creative works.
  • Assistance: help.

B

  • Baggage: bags, cases, and other items that you bring with you when you travel.
  • Beer: an alcoholic liquid prepared from grain and hops.
  • Behavior: the way in which someone acts.
  • Botany: the scientific investigation of plants.
  • Bread: food made by mixing flour, water, and often yeast and baking.
  • Butter: a light yellow solid food prepared from cream that is spread on toast or used in cooking. 

C
  •  Calm: quiet, peaceful, and worry-free.
  • Chaos: a condition of confusion.

  • Cheese: a food prepared from milk.
  • Childhood: the period when someone is a child.
  • Chocolate: a sweet, generally dark, food produced from cacao beans and sold in blocks, or a little sweet prepared from this.
  • Coffee: a dark chocolate powder with a strong flavor and smell produced by crushing black beans from a tropical plant and used to make a drink.
  • Confusion: a scenario in which individuals are confused about what is going on, and what they should do.
  • Cookery: food preparation and cooking as a skill or activity.
  • Cotton: the threads that develop around the seeds of a tall plant that are most commonly seen in the United States, China, and South Asia.
  • Countryside: Land that is not located in towns, cities, or industrial regions and is either used for farming or left in its natural condition.
  • Courage: the ability to keep your fear under control in a risky or challenging circumstance.
  • Currency: the money used in a certain place at a specific time.
  • Cutlery: Food-eating knives, forks, and spoons.
D
  • Damage: to destroy or ruin things.
  • Danger: the possibility of someone being harmed or dying.
  • Darkness: with little or no brightness.
  • Depression: the state of being extraordinarily miserable and devoid of optimism about the future.
  • Dessert: sweet dish eaten at the end of a meal.
  • Dignity: behavior that is controlled, serious, and respected by others.
  • Distribution: the process of giving anything to many individuals, or spreading or providing things.
  • Dust: dry dirt in the form of a powder that covers construction surfaces, or tiny dry bits of soil, or sand.
  • Duty: anything you have to complete as part of your job, or whatever you believe is the proper thing to do.
E
  • Education: the process of teaching or learning, particularly at a school or college, or the knowledge gained as a result of this.
  • Electricity: a type of energy that may be generated in a variety of methods and is used to power machines that generate light, heat, and so on.

  • Energy: the capacity and capability to be mentally and physically active.Equipment: the collection of tools, clothing, and other items required for a specific task.
  • Engineering: engineer's work.
  • Entertainment: shows, films, television, or other entertainment-related acts or activities, or similar performance.
  • Environment: the air, water, and land where humans, animals, and plants live.
  • Envy: to wish you possessed something that someone else has.
  • Ethics: the study of what is morally correct and incorrect, or a set of assumptions about what is morally wrong or right.
  • Evidence: one or more factors for believing or disbelieving something.

F- J

uncountable nouns from f to j 


F

Fame: the condition of being well-known or recognized among many people as a result of your accomplishments, abilities, etc.

  • Fiction: a book or novel made about fantasy characters and events rather than actual people and facts.
  • Flu: a common infectious disease characterized by fever and headache.
  • Food: anything that humans and animals eat to stay alive.
  • Forgiveness: an act or willingness to forgive.
  • Freedom: the situation or ability to be capable or permitted to do, speak, think, etc. anything you choose without restriction or limitation.
  • Friendship: a situation involving two persons who are friends.
  • Fruit: the soft part of a plant that contains the seeds Many fruits are sweet and can be eaten.
  • Fun: pleasure, joy, or amusement.
  • Furniture: items placed in a house or other building to make it acceptable and pleasant for living or working in, such as chairs, tables, 

G

  • Gasoline: formal for fuel.
  • Genetics: the study of how genes carry on the features and characteristics of parents to their children in all living things.
  • Glass: a tough, clear material used to produce windows, bottles, and other items.
  • Gold: a chemical element that is a precious, shiny yellow metal used in the manufacture of coins and jewelry.
  • Grammar: the rules that control how words change shape and join with other words to produce sentences.
  • Grass: a short, green plant that grows naturally throughout most of the earth's surface, with groups of extremely thin leaves that grow in enormous numbers.
  • Gratitude: the state or characteristic of being thankful.
  • Ground: the planet's surface.
  • Guilt: a sense of anxiety or dissatisfaction caused by doing something wrong, such as causing harm to another person.
  • Gymnastics: Physical exercises and activities performed inside, usually with the use of equipment such as bars and ropes, to enhance body strength and flexibility.
H
  • Happiness: the feeling of joy.
  • Hardware: the electrical and mechanical components of a computer
  • Hatred: a strong dislike.
  • Heat: the state of being hot or warm.
  • Height: the length from top to bottom of an object or the trait of being tall.
  • Help: to make something possible or easier for someone to accomplish by performing some of the efforts yourself or by offering guidance, money, or assistance.
  • Honesty: the quality of being truthful.
  • Honey: a delicious, sticky, yellow material created by bees used as food.
  • Hospitality: the act of being welcoming and nice to guests and visitors.
  • Housework: the task of keeping a home clean and neat.
  • Humor: the ability to find things amusing, the method in which individuals perceive some things to be hilarious, or the trait of being funny.
  • Hydrogen: a chemical component that is the lightest gas, has no color, flavor, or smell, and forms water when mixed with oxygen.
I
  • Ice: water that has frozen and solidified.
  • Imagination: the capacity to visualize images in one's mind.
  • Importance:  the value of being important.
  • Industry: the businesses and activities associated with the production of goods for sale, particularly in a factory or specialized field.
  • Information: details about a situation, person, or event.
  • Injustice: a state in which there is no justice or fairness.
  • Innocence: the fact that someone is not a criminal.
  • Insurance: an arrangement in which you pay the company money in exchange for their paying your costs if you have an accident or are injured.
  • Iron: a chemical element that appears as a gray metal. It is strong, is used to make steel, and is found in very small levels of blood.
  • Irony: a circumstance in which something intended to achieve one outcome has the opposite or entirely different result.
J
  • Jam: a sweet, smooth food made by maximizing fruit with sugar. It is eaten with bread.
  • Jealousy: a state of dissatisfaction and anger due to someone else having something or someone you desire.
  • Jewelry: adornments placed on your clothes or body that are typically composed of rich metals such as gold and silver, in addition to precious stones.
  • Joy: tremendous pleasure.
  • Juice: the liquid formed from fruits or vegetables.
  • Justice: fairness in how individuals are treated.

K-o

uncountable nouns list from k to o.


K

  • Kindness: the trait of being kind.
  • Knowledge: comprehension or understanding of a subject gained by experience or study, generally acquired by one person or by a group of people.
L
  • Labor: practical task, especially when it requires a lot of physical effort.
  • Land: the earth's surface that is not covered by water.
  • Laughter: the act of smiling or the sound of laughing.
  • Lava: Hot liquid rock erupting from the earth via a volcano, or solid rock created as it cools.
  • Leather: Animal skin is preserved by being treated and utilized to make shoes, bags, clothing, and tools.
  • Leisure: when you're not working or performing other duties.
  • Linguistics: the scientific study of language structure and development in general or of specific languages.
  • Literature: creative artistic works, particularly those with significant and long-lasting artistic merit.
  • Love: to have deep feelings for another person and be physically and emotionally attracted to them, or to have strong emotions for a friend or family member.
  • Luck: the force that causes things to happen to you, especially pleasant things, by chance instead of through your efforts or skills.
  • Luggage: the bags, suitcases, and so on that you bring with you when you travel.
M
  • Machinery: a collection of huge machines or the components of a machine that allow it to work.
  • Magic: the use of special abilities to create events that would be impossible, like in children's stories.
  • Marble: a sort of highly hard rock with a line pattern that feels chilly and may be cleaned to become shiny and smooth.
  • Mathematics: the study of numbers, forms, and space using logic and generally a particular set of symbols and rules to organize them.
  • Mayonnaise: a thick, white sauce prepared from oil, vinegar, and the yolk of eggs that is often served cold.
  • Meat: the flesh of an animal used for eating.
  • Metal: a chemical element, such as steel or gold, or a composite of such elements, such as steel, which is typically hard and strong and allows electricity and heat to pass through it.
  • Methane: a colorless gas that is frequently used as fuel.
  • Milk: the white liquid made by cows, goats, and sheep and used by people as a drink or to make butter, cheese, and other dairy products.
    • Money: coins or notes used to purchase things, or the quantity of these that a person possesses.
    • Moonlight: the moon's thin light.
    • Motherhood: the condition or time of becoming a mom.
    • Motivation: a passion to accomplish anything.
    • Mud: mixing dirt and water.
    • Music: a sequence of sounds produced by musical instruments, voices, computers, or a mix of these, to entertain those who listen to it.
    N
    • Nature: everything in the world, including all creatures, plants, and rocks, as well as all features, forces, and actions that take place or exist without the involvement of humans, such as the climate, the sea, the mountains, the birth of new creatures or plants, and growth.
    • News: current event information or reports.
    • Nitrogen: a chemical substance that is a colorless, odorless gas that makes up the majority of the earth's atmosphere and is present in all living things.
    • Nonsense: a concept, statement, piece of writing, or act that is stupid or foolish.
    • Nurture: how children are treated as they grow, particularly in comparison to the features they are born with.
    • Nutrition: the ingredients you put in your body as food and how they affect your health.
    O
    • Obedience: the fact that individuals or animals follow instructions.
    • Obesity: very fat in a way that is harmful to one's health.
    • Oil: petroleum the black oil extracted from underneath the earth's surface from which petrol is derived.
    • Oxygen: a chemical element that exists as a gas with no taste or color Oxygen makes up an enormous amount of the air on Earth and is required for animals and plants to exist.

    P-T

    uncountable list from p to t.

    P

    • Painting: the making of a picture.
    • Parking: leaving a car at a certain location for a long time.

    • Passion: a strong emotion, such as love, hatred, anger, or another feeling.

    • Patience: the capacity to wait, to keep going despite problems, or to endure without complaining or becoming upset.

    • Petrol: a petroleum-derived liquid used mostly as fuel for cars and other vehicles.

    • Philosophy: the use of reason to comprehend topics such as the nature of the actual world and life, the use and limits of knowledge, and moral judgment principles.

    • Physics: the scientific investigation of matter and energy and their interactions.

    • Power: the capacity to control others and events.

    • Progress: movement to a better or more developed condition, or an advanced position.

    • Pronunciation: the method in which a word or letter is pronounced, or the way in which a language is being spoken.

    • Psychology: the scientific study of how the human mind works and how it impacts behavior or the effect of a person's personality on their behavior.

    • Purity: clean and empty from any dangerous substances.

    Q

    • Quality: how effective something is.

    • Quantity: the amount or number of anything, particularly one that can be counted.

    • Quartz: hard, clear solid material utilized in the manufacture of electrical equipment as well as precise watches and clocks

    R

    • Racism: practices, behaviors, norms, and so on that continue to give certain people an unfair advantage while treating others unfairly or negatively based on race.

    • Rain: clouds' drops of water.

    • Reliability: the ability to be believed or trusted as a result of performing or acting positively.


    • Relief: a feeling of comfort that something terrible has not occurred.

    • Religion: the practice of worshiping a goddess or gods, or any similar belief system.


    • Research: a   full investigation of a subject, especially to uncover new facts or gain new insight.

    • Respect: appreciation for someone or something you think has outstanding ideas or traits.


    • Rice: the small seeds of a certain kind of grass that are cooked and consumed as food.

    • Rubbish: wasted stuff or items that are no longer required or wanted.


    • Rum: a powerful alcoholic beverage created from the sugar cane plant.

    S

    • Satisfaction: a good sensation you get when you acquire what you desired or when you do something you wanted to do.

    • Security: protection of a person, building, organization, or nation against dangers such as crime or foreign country assaults.


    • Shame: if Something is defined as a shame, it is disappointing or unsatisfactory.

    • Shopping: the act of buying stuff from shops.


    • Silver: a chemical component that produces a pricey shining, white metal that is used to make jewelry, coins, and cutlery (such as knives and spoons).

    • Sleep: the body's inactive condition and the mind's unconsciousness. 


    • Smoke: the grey, black, or white combination of gas and tiny carbon pieces created when anything burns.

    • Sorrow: a strong sense of grief.


    • Soup: a hot, liquid dish made from vegetables, meat, or seafood.

    • Space: an empty area that can be used.


    • Speed: how quickly things move.

    • Stream: Water that naturally flows in a channel carved into rock or the ground, typically at ground level.


    • Sugar: a sweet element used to add sweetness to foods and beverages, especially one produced from sugar cane and sugar beet plants.

    • Sunshine: the sun's brightness and heat.

    T

    • Technology: the application of scientific discoveries in practice, particularly in industry.

    • Temperature: the quantity of heat measured in a place or the body.

    • Tennis: a game that includes using a racquet to strike a tiny ball through a central net that is played between two or four players in a dedicated playing area.


    • Thirst: a desire to drink anything.

    • Thunder: the unexpectedly loud sound that comes from the sky, particularly during a storm.


    • Tolerance: acceptance of behavior and ideas that differ from your own, even if you may not agree or approve of them.

    • Toothpaste: a material used to clean your teeth that is put on a toothbrush.


    • Traffic: the number of cars on the road, or the number of planes, trains, or ships on a route.

    • Transportation: the movement of persons or products from one area to another.

    U- Z

    uncountable list from u to z. 


    U

    • Understanding: awareness of a subject, scenario, or how something works.

    • Unemployment: the number of individuals who do not have a paid job.

    • Unity: the condition of being together or in harmony.

    • Usage: the manner in which a specific term in a language, or a language in general, is utilized.

    V

    • Veal:  Flesh from a young cow.

    • Vegetarianism: Not eating meat for health or religious reasons, or to avoid being violent toward animals.

    • Vengeance: The punishment of someone who has harmed you, your friends, or your family, or the desire for such punishment to occur.

    • Vinegar: a sour liquid, usually prepared from sour wine, malt, or cider, used to flavor or preserve food.

    • Violence: acts or words meant to cause harm to others.

    • Vitality:  Strength and energy.

    W

    • Warmth: possessing or creating a comfortably high but not hot temperature.

    • Water: a pure, colorless liquid that falls from the sky as rain and is essential for animal and plant existence.

    • Wealth: a large sum of money or precious items owned by someone.

    • Wheat: a plant from which flour is made.

    • Width: the distance from one side of something to the other.

    • Wildlife: Animals and plants that grow without human interference, usually under natural conditions.

    • Wisdom: the capacity to make smart decisions and judgments based on your knowledge and experience.

    • Wool: the smooth, thick hair that grows on sheep and other animals bodies.

    y


    • Yeast: a kind of fungus used in the production of alcoholic beverages like beer and wine, as well as in the bread-making process that causes it to swell and become light.

    • Yoga: a system of physical and mental exercises that began in India and are supposed to  control the body and mind

    • Yogurt: a quite sour, thick liquid formed from bacteria added to milk, consumed with sugar, fruit, and other additions.

    Z


    • Zinc: a bluish-white metal used in the manufacture of other metals or as a protective covering for other metals.

    • Zoology: the scientific investigation of animals, particularly their structure.

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